none of this really makes sense to me...
you created a transaction, signed and broadcasted it (you wallet probably did this for you, so this might have happened automatically).
The raw, signed transaction you pushed to the network was this one:
0100000004365c68e4f980832686900f4b64d9d8856a6596cec008620e0155f88618b8a20b000000008b483045022100dc83098c371982e4d5cb55bc1467b1c84f37db4742ea1d755175314531e188f502207b80d1e126e398cb035cfac2498b7829e1f064a961453209af6f49ee29e33afd014104f3c93aa379ff1c37c86a97a8e50dd94fccde190ab3333081c08d7dc76464fb601de10b4bbbec4d485244b44d45f53a1068fe5bc29f704d7821682b0b2b0ab9eeffffffff155c0794893c84e75bd548b8be3be47a29eb5dfe053e0f624b14c81b2b080e2b000000008b483045022100e926652aca8ba8ffdfb7608b9d98097c54efad9322bc85c6018f49b848fcce9c022039656f02b3c10cefa7be79f5947cb636419b76e7768486fae0f04dff2b09cfdb014104f3c93aa379ff1c37c86a97a8e50dd94fccde190ab3333081c08d7dc76464fb601de10b4bbbec4d485244b44d45f53a1068fe5bc29f704d7821682b0b2b0ab9eeffffffffe0ee242fd16f8f11e5ad312b0db65aab9063dbda4ac6a870af50a9e735d77a2b000000008b483045022100f3728895b9e45f866eb64bbc91e3a575d0b8b2dd7e1c95f049e1e68b1886c319022007ff941e91b1af406ad6f45da9ada2ae80f3bdc70e0aa331de4e70eca6dab8a2014104f3c93aa379ff1c37c86a97a8e50dd94fccde190ab3333081c08d7dc76464fb601de10b4bbbec4d485244b44d45f53a1068fe5bc29f704d7821682b0b2b0ab9eeffffffff81acdc66928f09c35ce108e9b96254d3b1597e377b0fd7ec20ac15b472a2a7cb000000008b4830450221009a2136768ecd17ae4518732cd97b7f7f5bc48cc2c1230e2aa7fed072e3d2bfb4022077610b5075dbd8974466de1f1c064106bf5927fbf912723d87c47e5c8cbb0804014104f3c93aa379ff1c37c86a97a8e50dd94fccde190ab3333081c08d7dc76464fb601de10b4bbbec4d485244b44d45f53a1068fe5bc29f704d7821682b0b2b0ab9eeffffffff01602b9a00000000001976a914d99fc838b7255ae45e283e7de95090cb0af7feb888ac00000000
As you can clearly see by the length of this raw transaction, it was really big... In fact, it was 764 bytes.
Since a miner working on a block can only pick transactions untill the 1 Mb block he is currently working on is full, he would need a rather large fee in order to place those 764 bytes in the block he's working on.
You payed a fee of 0.000804
BTC for a 764 bytes transaction. That's ~105 satoshi's/byte.
At the time of writing, you'd need to add 163 satoshi's/byte to have a 95% chance of getting into the next 3 blocks (~30min waiting time). Since you only payed 105 sat/byte, chances are small your transaction will be included in the next 24 blocks (~240 minutes).
Remember, a miner can pick ANY transaction he/she wants to fill up the block he/she is currently working on. So even a 1 satoshi/byte transaction *MIGHT* end up in the very next block... Altough the chances of this happening are really small.
This is what happens if you use the viabtc txaccellerator recommended both on my site, and by the users that posted before me... if you use their accellerator, you ask them to please add your transaction to the block they're working on, eventough they could make more money by adding a transaction with a higher fee/byte. This is not a magic tool, it's just a mining pool doing this out of kindness (or because they have a political agenda)...
Since you said you didn't have a clue what my site said, i wouldn't bother reading the RBF/CPFP/double spending sections of my site, they would only confuse a new user... The other options, however, should not be confusing to anybody...