Life returned to normal for Brett Favre after this past weekend’s Pro Football Hall of Fame induction.

So what is normal for the legendary quarterback?

“I’ll probably cut grass in my front lawn with my gold jacket on,” Favre said while in Canton. “Nah, it’s too hot for that. People would be like, 'What is wrong with that guy? Too many hits to the head.' I don’t know.”

Much like the bronze bust that sits in the Hall of Fame gallery, the gold jacket is a symbol that identifies those enshrined -- perhaps even more so because they get to keep it. Last year, before former Packers general manager Ron Wolf went in, his son, Eliot, who was his presenter, said his dad would “probably wear it 24/7 for a week.”

Now in the Hall of Fame, Brett Favre is returning to life as usual. AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar

Favre, however, doesn’t think life will change much. His youngest daughter, Breleigh, is 17 and an accomplished high school volleyball player; her season actually started the day of Favre’s enshrinement. That will likely be the only match he misses. His oldest daughter, Brittany, and her husband, Alex, have two children who live nearby in Mississippi. Favre rarely plays golf anymore; he was a regular on the links during his playing days. But he still hunts and works the land on his massive estate near Hattiesburg, Mississippi. He and his wife, Deanna, also train for triathlon races,

“You go back to life as usual,” Favre said. “I don’t think many people are going to say, ‘Hey Brett, we’ll have supper for you here in a minute and we’ll wine and dine you and we’ll press your coat.’ I don’t think any of that is going to happen.”

Favre, 46, admitted nothing can replace the rush he got from playing football -- “You can’t cut grass and get the same feeling as throwing a touchdown pass to Sterling Sharpe,” he said -- but in most other ways he’s the same laid-back guy who's more comfortable in shorts and a T-shirt than in anything more formal.

“He’s the same old Brett,” former Packers tight end Mark Chmura said. “I was with him two months ago in Mississippi and went to dinner with him, and sure as anything, he’s wearing the same shirt the next day to breakfast. I’m like, ‘C’mon, Nike or whoever can’t send you another shirt?’ He’s the exact same guy that I met in 1992.”

Favre’s only real connection to the football world comes in the form of a weekly radio show he just started co-hosting on SiriusXM NFL Radio. He said he doesn’t miss the game and finally feels settled into the retirement he embarked upon in 2011 (his third and final one).

“The first regular-season game was underway the year after I retired, [and] I didn’t feel like I needed to be there,” Favre said. “In fact, I remember the Vikings were playing at San Diego and Percy Harvin returned the opening kickoff for a touchdown. And I was sitting there making a sandwich, Deanna and I were in the kitchen, and San Diego had the ball and went three-and-out, and Minnesota had the ball and I was watching and thinking, ‘Boy, I’m so glad I’m not there.’ I knew then and there I had made the right move.”

He has one return trip to Green Bay scheduled: for the Oct. 16 game against the Cowboys, when he will receive his Hall of Fame ring. When asked if he might become a more frequent visitor to Lambeau Field, Favre said: “Let’s take it one year at a time. Let’s start with this year. It was pretty cool going last year.”