Fish,
That was a very insightful post! And yes, I finished the whole thing, so what does that say about me? ;p Yes, I am pretty bored, but I guess that's a good thing, since I can try to help you out a bit, and if I weren't bored, I might not. :)
I think you understand your addiction pretty well. "The control the weed had on my life, my self-image, my confidence, my self-esteem. I am ashamed of myself for smoking for so long. I worry I might forget about how horribly I hated cigarettes, how I smoked when I was sick, how I smoked to smoke over every emotion I had, how I smoked to avoid feeling, to avoid living. I was afraid to not smoke, afraid of seeing myself for who I am, afraid to discover my path." I don't think you're going to forget how much you hated to smoke... you seem to have a clear sense of it now. If you're worried about forgetting, copy/paste this post that you made into a quit diary (if you don't already have one started, I HIGHLY recommend it). When you feel your desire sliding a bit, read that. You obviously want to quit and I don't think you will lose that desire. I can tell you that over the course of many months, my desire to stay quit has fluctuated, but as soon as I started to feel comfortable in my quit on a regular basis... I had various times of feeling comfortable, but they didn't always last, so when I started feeling comfortable more often than I was not comfortable, that was when my desire to quit sky rocketed. So I really don't think that you will start to not want your quit, but if you do, go back and read your reasons for quitting (again, if you don't have those written down, I highly suggest it) and read this post to give yourself a glimpse of the desire that you have right now.
As for associating quitting with bad experiences, I'm going to tell you a story... within a month of quitting, I dislocated my shoulder, lost my job, got assaulted by my roommate at the time, lost about 95% of the friends that I had at the time, moved 200 miles away, and started school all over again. My life changed drastically after quitting, and a lot of it was pretty bad, but I don't really associate that with quitting. What I DO associate with quitting is life transformation. After I quit, my whole life completely changed and