After several weeks of confinement in an attempt to stem the Covid-19 epidemic, the deconfinement will begin on Monday, May 11. For it to be successful, respecting barrier gestures will be essential, but many have already planned their "deconfinement planning". 

Only one day left! As of Monday, it will be possible to leave your home without a certificate of derogatory displacement, after more than 50 days of confinement in an attempt to stem the epidemic of coronavirus. And many are impatiently awaiting this day of deconfinement, even if, as repeatedly reminded by the health authorities and the nursing staff, it will not be necessary to "relax", to avoid re-circulating the virus. 

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"I already have a schedule of deconfinement!"

"This deconfinement, I expect it like the Messiah!", Says Michèle to the microphone of Europe 1. For the first time in more than fifty days, this retiree will be able to visit her daughter, who lives 50 kilometers from At her place. "At 7:30 in the morning on Monday, I'm on my hats and on the highway!". But beware, who says deconfinement does not mean non-compliance with barrier gestures and protective measures: "I would have my mask and my visor," she explains. 

After eight weeks confined all alone, Michèle thinks only of joining her loved ones. "I already have a schedule of deconfinement! Saturday, we will be less than ten: we are celebrating two birthdays!"

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"I know what I'm leaving, I don't know what I'm finding"

A joy shared by Marie, who finds her roommates ... but also Paris, and her public transport. The young teacher remains anxious all the same, on the eve of a very special comeback. "I know what I'm leaving, I don't know exactly what I find, because I'm going to have to go back to work, to find a school very different from the one I know. I don't know exactly how it will be in Paris , in terms of outings, atmosphere ... "

"Now we have to live with the virus"

If the "return to normal" is not yet in the minds, many welcome the opportunity to "turn the page" of containment. Like Rémi, a family man in Chartres, who will resume work on Monday when his children return to school. "Now we're going to have to live with the virus so we have to be able to do something else. It's getting long!", He admits. "I was waiting to be able to return to an active social life". 

And if gatherings will not be immediately authorized, for Rémi, the simple fact of not having to fill out a certificate on each outing is already a little freedom found.