This weekend, the sidewalks in Toronto are quite busier, the patios are full and, as resident Lucie Malbeteau describes it, there’s a sense of “freedom” in the air.
As she sits in a Queen Street West café having brunch on Sunday, Malbeteau is experiencing the city for the first time, having shifted here from France nine months ago.
“It’s an amazing day, an amazing weekend,” Malbeteau said.
She says the simple act of having brunch indoors feels both normal and awesome at the same time.
“It’s like, I don’t know, like freedom,” she explained.
The café, known as Marvellous by Fred, is busy with a lot of walk-ins, and people wanting to sit down.
“It’s just like something that we used to have, and now we just discover how good it is to have it back,” store supervisor Melanie Ven Der Horst said.
Ontario entered Step 3 of its reopening plan on Friday, which one again permits indoor dining and some other loosened public health restrictions. There is no limit on the number of persons per table, though restaurants must permit for social distancing between groups.
Gyms and movie theaters additionally reopened their doors Friday with capacity limits in place.
Outside Scotiabank Theatre, Davin Lengyel is about to go see the newest installment in the “Fast and Furious” series, “F9”.
Lengyel said he can’t wait to share in the experience with other persons in the audience.
“Movies are always a communal experience in the first place. That’s what they’re for,” he said.
And as movie enthusiasts come in on a hot July afternoon, Lengyel says watching movies and TV at home during the pandemic just can’t compete with the theatre.
“It’s the large screen,” he says. “It’s the experience of seeing it with a group of other people you can hear them appreciate it, you can hear the ‘oohs’ and the ‘awes.’”
At an F45 gym in Etobicoke, owner Adam Meghji was cleaning up, after a weekend of almost full classes.
He says the feeling inside was “jovial.”
“The mood is just so excited. I think people are not only excited to come back into the studio to work out but also just to see other people,” Meghji explained.
After being closed for almost 9 months, gym staff said they were ready to reopen and pick up where they left off.
“I feel like there’s more optimism this time around the reopening that we’re going to stay open,” Meghji said.
Just a bit of freedom, a bit of optimism, and plenty of hope that there will be no looking back.