>>5976822It depends on what you like. As soon as I started finding shows and movies boring I didn't know what to do to fil the empty space.
So I started moving around seeing what to do and making a new network of people.
On week days I draw and write, I'd like to write a book one day, tell a story even if it's for a small target.
On weekends I joined a community iniciative on a neighbouring town where there's shared land to plant stuff and learn about it and that gave me some ideas to maybe make something similar with a different theme on my town too. I've met pretty based people doing this activities and it's easy to weed out the ones that I don't get along with.
I also go hiking a lot with a couple of friends and sometimes I go alone just to enjoy the silence in the mountains, the birds and the nature and see the different landscapes of my country. The rest of the time I work for my business and take care of myself but I have lots of things that I'd like to do and so much time that I wasted watching movies, series and playing so many videogames. Unfortunately, I still spend too much time on the internet.
Honestly, breaking free is a personal journey. You start realizing things and thinking for yourself again and it can be tough at first but very liberating afterwards. It's hard to explain but I'm sure that you'll understand as soon as you drop the "mind control" so to speak.
I practice kajukenbo and for what some friends told me they have like community centers in Australia that do all kinds of activities almost for free that are based on these kinds of things (self-defense, survivalism, etc) that could be really interesting too.