One caveat to what I'm about to say. Quebec covers a vast area (its roughly 2.4 times the size of France) with many regions of varying density, political, economic and social variances. Although bilingual, English is my Mother tongue. Thus my exposure to Quebec society and its political aspirations is more often than not presented to me through a predominantly English media lens and whatever bias that might come with that. So what I guess I'm trying to say is, my living here shouldn't be construed as making me anything close to being an authoritative voice on the subject.
That being said, at the present time I don't sense any groundswell of support amongst the general population for any dramatic change in the status quo and the province's relationship with the rest of Canada. In fact, in my 68 years largely spent living here (I also lived for a few years in Toronto), this is amongst the quietest periods I have sensed the general sentiment on the question of independence.
I suspect that any periodic bouts of separation rhetoric that occasionally might surface has more to do with political posturing and attempting to gain some leverage over the Federal government in some area of jurisdiction, than in any real anger & frustration with the status quo. Its simply the nature of our Federal system of governance. And the Western provinces after years of watching Quebec play this card, eventually caught on and now use it as well as part of their negotiation strategies
Regarding the referendum's. Having lived through both of them and watched as the final tally in 1995 came in at a razor thin 50.58% to stay part of Canada, one must appreciate how civilly the population handled that result. While there were tensions present and some isolated incidents, in large part there were no major disruptions to life and while surely resentments were present amongst the political classes in particular, the general population seemed to have accepted the vote and simply moved on with their lives.
In the years that followed, Quebec was able to secure increasing powers and jurisdictions for itself and the generation that endured the injustices of the past, both real and perceived, and that gave rise to call for separation have largely passed from the active political scene. Now a new generation that has had even greater access and exposure to the world through the internet etc does not carry that same baggage from the past. A poll conducted in 2020, 25 years after that referendum showed only 34% of Quebecers would now support independence and 54% would be against.
More recently if one followed the Freedom Convoy efforts, you were likely to find just as many French speaking Quebecers in Ottawa and on the highway overpasses throughout the province waving Canadian flags in support of the truckers just like in the rest of Canada. (Trudeau finally brough the country together
)
Quebec you will find is an interesting place, and frankly I really enjoy living here. If you ever get the urge to visit I'd be glad to show you around.
Not sure that answers your question.
Cheers!