Yes, of course the status quo... for now, or as it was in 2016! However the EU is going forward on a trajectory that many in the UK don't want to follow, its like finding yourself on the wrong bus and wanting getting off at the next stop, but there isn't one! That's what drove many leavers to take, what you might say is a 'leap of faith', in the one and only chance in forty years, that they had been given to make a difference.
This is why there is so much anger between both groups they are looking at something from completely different angles and guess what... they see things differently.
I am being serious, Brexit has become or will in my opinion, become a watershed, not only for our relations with the EU, but also within the UK. It looks as if the deal Boris seems to be wanting to achieve will float off NI towards an economic 'united Ireland' which actually may well turnout to be beneficial for the province... law of unintended consequences perhaps, wonder who will take the credit if that happens?
Great Britain can then reform itself as a constitutional entity of independent countries, if Scotland votes for independence and then realises its better off as an independent country in a constitutional arrangement with its nearest neighbour. Lots of ifs there, but we cannot turn the clock back now the Brexit genie is out of the bottle, well almost, and it will be dammed difficult, if not impossible, to get it back in.