What you should do is you should review the guidance on what to do when you are restricted from asking questions, and follow the advice there: https://math.stackexchange.com/help/question-bans
Specifically, I encourage you to edit your existing questions to improve them based upon the feedback you've received. There are many ways you can improve your existing questions:
You can review our guidance on how to ask a good question, and make sure you are following all of the guidance there: How to ask a good question.
You can review all of the comments you've received on your questions, then edit your question to address all of that feedback. When people ask for clarifications, revise your post so that it will be clear to anyone who encounters the question for the first time. When people provide useful tidbits, you can add this information to the question, and provide useful background. Once each comment is addressed, flag it as 'no longer needed'.
Don't just append stuff to the end of the question, but revise it so it reads well for someone who encounters it for the first time. Remember, we are seeking to build an archive of knowledge that will be useful for others in the future.
You can make sure that each question provide appropriate context. For instance, provide motivation or the context where you encountered the question, provide some background to teach people about what is known about the subject, show what progress you've made, etc.
If you have deleted questions, you should improve them as well, to the best of your ability, and then when they are in good shape, if they might be useful, undelete them.
You should not edit existing questions to completely change the contents of the question, as you have done at all of Illegal intrinsic error in MAGMA and How do you solve the Diophantine equation $x^2=y^3+3$ using the unique factorization domain of the quadratic field $\mathbb{Z}(\sqrt3)$? and On the sum of reciprocals of prime-balanced numbers. That is considered an abuse of the site.
Currently, you are restricted from asking further questions because the site's algorithm has decided you have asked too many questions that are low quality. Asking here is a privilege, not a right. I notice you wrote "But I don't want to wait that long time." That comes off as a bit entitled. Of course you don't want to wait; I can completely understand that. But if the site allowed everyone to ask as many questions as they wanted, regardless of quality, then this site would be overwhelmed by low-quality questions. We would turn into Yahoo! Answers or Quora, which would not be good for the health of the community. I imagine you want to ask here because Math.SE is so valuable and because people often give useful answers here. Part of what makes Stack Exchange sites such a valuable resource, and what makes answerers want to continue using this site, is that we have quality standards. These quality standards exist to protect the health of the community. So, you'll need to abide by those rules. This means improving your existing questions and waiting some time before you can ask further questions.