I think you need to understand the consequences of what we have already done.
There is no reset switch.
Stopping carbon emissions will not reset the climate anything short of thousands of years.
You seem very confused between local climate variability ( ENSO, NAO etc) and natural forcings which are primarily orbital ( very long cycle ), continental positioning ( even longer cycle ) and volcanic - very short cycle.
Local variability does not alter the radiative balance - the others do.
Local variability is simply the expression of energy in the atmosphere from changes in the crysopshere, hydrosphere - for instance shifts in ocean currents or pools of hot or cold in ocean basins.
This can have dramatic affect as we've seen with a strong La Nina in Australia but these variables lay on top of climate change induced by forcing.....in our case fossil carbon and to a degree methane.
So ENSO may magnify the forcing or mitigate it.....some call La Nina the air conditioner for North America.
Disruptions in the polar patterns ( this winter and last ) due to the consequences of a warmer Arctic Ocean with more open water mean deep continental cold.
This does not change the radiative balance - it simply is local change - natural variability some induced by the longer term forcing of orbital, continental placement, volcanic and now AGW
The latter cannot be stopped or reset - we have already altered the climate out to at least 100k years.....perhaps completely over riding the ice age that would have been part of the next 10k years.
Carbon is forever in human terms
http://www.nature.com/climate/2008/0812/full/climate.2008.122.html
these changes are not reversable by stopping the carbon emissions
Abstract
The severity of damaging human-induced climate change depends not only on the magnitude of the change but also on the potential for irreversibility. This paper shows that the climate change that takes place due to increases in carbon dioxide concentration is largely irreversible for 1,000 years after emissions stop. Following cessation of emissions, removal of atmospheric carbon dioxide decreases radiative forcing, but is largely compensated by slower loss of heat to the ocean, so that atmospheric temperatures do not drop significantly for at least 1,000 years. Among illustrative irreversible impacts that should be expected if atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations increase from current levels near 385 parts per million by volume (ppmv) to a peak of 450–600 ppmv over the coming century are irreversible dry-season rainfall reductions in several regions comparable to those of the “dust bowl” era and inexorable sea level rise. Thermal expansion of the warming ocean provides a conservative lower limit to irreversible global average sea level rise of at least 0.4–1.0 m if 21st century CO2 concentrations exceed 600 ppmv and 0.6–1.9 m for peak CO2 concentrations exceeding ≈1,000 ppmv. Additional contributions from glaciers and ice sheet contributions to future sea level rise are uncertain but may equal or exceed several meters over the next millennium or longer.
ttp://www.pnas.org/content/106/6/1704.full
No foolin' guys we've made a mess of it ...and it's not going away.