Pregame. Dive bars
Ask Lemmy
A Fediverse community for open-ended, thought provoking questions
Rules: (interactive)
1) Be nice and; have fun
Doxxing, trolling, sealioning, racism, and toxicity are not welcomed in AskLemmy. Remember what your mother said: if you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all. In addition, the site-wide Lemmy.world terms of service also apply here. Please familiarize yourself with them
2) All posts must end with a '?'
This is sort of like Jeopardy. Please phrase all post titles in the form of a proper question ending with ?
3) No spam
Please do not flood the community with nonsense. Actual suspected spammers will be banned on site. No astroturfing.
4) NSFW is okay, within reason
Just remember to tag posts with either a content warning or a [NSFW] tag. Overtly sexual posts are not allowed, please direct them to either !asklemmyafterdark@lemmy.world or !asklemmynsfw@lemmynsfw.com.
NSFW comments should be restricted to posts tagged [NSFW].
5) This is not a support community.
It is not a place for 'how do I?', type questions.
If you have any questions regarding the site itself or would like to report a community, please direct them to Lemmy.world Support or email info@lemmy.world. For other questions check our partnered communities list, or use the search function.
6) No US Politics.
Please don't post about current US Politics. If you need to do this, try !politicaldiscussion@lemmy.world or !askusa@discuss.online
Reminder: The terms of service apply here too.
Partnered Communities:
Logo design credit goes to: tubbadu
Especially with prices at name bars. Eff that.
I would argue that cities have more free activities than towns, by far. Cost of living is higher but so are wages.
Also, I don't understand why living in a huge home is required to stay in. Certainly isn't for me.
Anime, series, internet, comics, manga, and ofc music. Some casual games and literature, sometimes.
Also helps having a hobby like music production or 3D modeling, this is, all done on the computer ofc, outside of the computer there's no world, just a neverending roads and buildings and cars and stores and more of the same.
We live in so different citys and mine got bombed to the ground in ww2 and yet still is none of what you describe
One can only sit so long and stare at screens. Eventually there will be back problems and carpal tunnel.
I love computing too but I know I have to limit it because its not good for us.
Not going places they charge you money for.
You can go to a park, or spent a lovely afternoon at home, cook your own meals and clean your own clothes.
Fully free assuming you have some level of equipment:
- Attend the local parkrun for a free 5k race
- Go for a walk in the park/forest, of which my city has a plethora
- Go for a walk in Old Town
- If in summer, go for a swim in the lakes
- Take a long bike ride
- If during winter, go ice skating
- Work out at an outdoor gym
Pretty cheap activities:
- Take one of the public transit boats out to the archipelago
- Take the train somewhere
- Check out a museum
Turistguide?
Det hade man kunnat tro, ja!
Stay inside and drink alone in the basement. Why would you leave the housing you paid an arm and a leg for?
Really gotta get full use of that rent payment.
Im cutting back on drinking so that's a no go for me. Video games it is!
While not free, I find a membership or two to be advantageous. There’s usually member swaps where you can get in another local location for free for a month. When we go on vacations our first stop is always a grocery store, and I usually try to get an extended stay hotel with a kitchen. Saves on eating out because we’ll pack for lunch and make dinner. We have an amusement park pass that works with other locations so parking and admission is included. Our museum membership works for hundreds of other out of state museums so we visit science and children’s museums included. Vacations are still expensive of course but this reduces costs significantly.
Other than that things like parks, beaches, library events. Meet up with friends at someone’s house.
Which state are you in, if you don't mind answering?
We live in Virginia but the museum passport is everywhere (there’s also a separate zoo/aquarium one too). The passport does not work for museums within an hour or so drive of the home museum but it works when we go out of town.
That's the ne- oh, you already meme'd that.
I guess that's one more reason why many people would rather scroll endlessly on social media, it's free*
Depending on the city you live at, the simplest solution would be to find a sports area and do sports there with others - basketball and football (soccer if you're 'murican) might be the most common and easy to find, as a good number of these are public and free to use
There's lots of free public spaces in my area. But it's also just as easy to stay home in a big city.
I'm outside a big city. But there are tons of free things to do. Many places do free days for residents. We have lots of parks. There are street fairs you can go to, and while food and drinks cost money. You usually can walk around and listen to music for free.
We have beaches you can go to, libraries, friends houses.
Window shopping is always free.
Feed the ducks
I realize im still spending money by being in my house out of town, but still, at least things I buy are owned by me, and im not paying someone else every time I want to do anything. If I want to stay at home all day I have tons of stuff to occupy my mind without going nuts.
This may surprise you, but it's possible to buy housing (that is bigger than one bedroom), stuff for hobbies, and access to entertainment in a city. 🫨
Haha yes, but is far far more expensive and most of them are in HOAs, which are satan incarnate.
Maybe it's not a thing in the US, but where I live you can also buy apartments, you don't have to rent them. No garden plant selection and front door color police if you live in an apartment. I mean we also don't have HOAs, it'd be ridiculous. But if you have enough money you could buy an apartment bigger than most people's houses, overlooking the city.
But also, for a mere 250 million dollars, you could have the highest penthouse in NYC which is also ridiculously big. If you move at least a hundred floors down and a bit farther away from Central Park, maybe settle for 1700 sq ft instead of 17000, things get more affordable in the cities too. Still need to have a high paid job of course.
I am also extremely annoyed that there are many amenities which coast money (like no public bathrooms and water fountains, maybe you can guess the country already).
On the other hand you can look for free stuff to do in your city. Things we have here:
Some museums are free
Botanical gardens
Outdoor movies in the summer
City festivals with live music
Public readings
How to get free things or access to low cost things:
Join a cheap club. Sport, boardgame, etc They normally also have the gear for beginners / newcomer’s. Volunteer. This gives you access to people and gear (time in exchange for feeling good, maybe do what you like and make an impact).
Maybe not everything you like you can find easily. I guess you have to dig to find a free rave if that’s what you are interested in. Back in the day I would have suggested looking for Facebook communities in your city.
Also librairies !
Enjoy the silence (noisy neighbours/road),
Enjoy the aircon/heater
Culture yourself up for free
EDIT: Ope, you did mention volunteering. It's early and I'm tired.
There are also lots of really cool things you can do for free by volunteering your time, such as comic cons or roller derby. Derby leagues are always needing non-skating officials or volunteers to do various things. You can work the ticket scanner at an MLB game and then, when done, watch it for free.
Exercise of one form or another mostly. As far as the places you gotta pay for, learning where to stretch your dollar while getting the enjoyment and social interaction you're looking for is a time and experience thing and you gotta look to find them.
Walk in the city centre, the historical centre is always neat, but we do have parks, riverside and more
Free events (Traditional, art school/club, municipal fest)
Be member or whatever hobby club with a fixed (and affordable) yearly rate, or even informal hobby group like the runners who meet at the park entrance every Sunday morning
They don't.
That's why they think cities are the only places in the world worth living. If there's not an endless sea of shit to waste their money on, they're lost.
When I lived in the city I was dead broke but had a great time. I hung out at the library, which was its own cool thing but also served as a community hub to let me know when the local Gurudwara was doing a luncheon, or when crafting clubs met, and having a library card also came with some museum passes. I learned about all sorts of cool, free goings on through my library.
There were also local attractions that had free days or days for locals, and there were street festivals nearby that had live music and performances. One of my favorite things about living in the city was hearing the sound of live music and walking out the door to go follow it to some cool, hitherto unknown to me event that was happening.
We also went ice skating on the pond in the park (free if you had your own skates), or went biking on bike paths. We built snow sculptures in public parks and gardens and just walked around exploring. There were lots of beautiful and interesting buildings and side streets where we could get pleasantly lost.
The key part of where I was is that it was walkable, and there were plenty of "third spaces". I understand not all cities have that. However, if you're in the US I highly recommend starting with your local library.
I certainly don't. Ain't anything free to do in this city except just walk around and experience the public. There aren't even any real dog parks here; nearest one is in another city 15 miles away. Best there is, is an indoor dog park that is also a bar and requires a fucking subscription.
Church activities
In my town, there's a lot of beautiful parks to hang out at. I can take a workshop down at the library. The museums sometimes have free admission days. There's lots of great things to do at low or no cost, you just have to look for them.
This is one place where traditional social media shines. Following local establishments on Facebook, or joining your city's subreddit, can keep you in the loop about cheap or free events in your city.
Get a bike that you can bring in your car. Park in a neighborhood or other area with free parking, get on the bike and just go exploring. It is a great way to learn about cool and often free stuff going on. If you can use transit and bring a bike, that's even better.
I've watched expensive music shows from a nearby parking garage using this technique. Outdoor music venues often can't stop the music from escaping into the nearby blocks.
Find a hobby that is easy to do in a park or other public space.
All the best free stuff is usually on the margins, so it takes some recon to figure out what is worth your time. But that's part of the adventure of exploring a city.