Northeast Corridor at least:

Even more moderate people are sliding past exhaustion and slipping to apathy. We have a high vaccination rate, but the media and political onslaught doesn't let up anyway. The rules seem to change arbitrarily, and there's also a undertone of shame and guilt when the fully vaccinated aren't wearing masks even when they're not required by corporate or local mandate. There's a lot of skepticism with the boosters in this group. How many, how often? Because they don't seem to make any difference. So similar to France it sounds like.

There's also zealots on both sides. Masks, vaccines and boosters forever, and they're still screeching at others to comply because they've been whipped up into a state of hysteria. Even if we were at 100%, these people would still permanently isolate themselves out of fear, even though they'd be fine if they did catch it. But they are going to make "the other side" comply by whatever means necessary. They fully support making the other side pariahs.
The other side of course is anti-vaccines for themselves for all manner or reasons, definitely against forcing kids to get unapproved vaccines, anti-masking, and usually flipping out at local school boards and teacher's unions (who are in the other camp).

So even in regions that were hit really hard by both variants, and have very high compliance with all medical recommendations, there's a growing sentiment of acceptance that the virus is here to stay, and growing resentment at the relentless hysteria.

There's a mixed bag of "returning to normal." I don't think a lot of people really want to go back to indoor events and businesses even though they're allowed to, and there's a big shift towards take out and home cooking instead of eating at sit-down restaurants. But at the same time, people are very much done with the masking and social distancing that don't seem to many any difference at all in the infection rates.

I'm in the moderate-turning-into-apathy crowd.

So we have a mix of everything.