Depending on whether your PC can hold two separate drives (some laptops have two M.2 slots, and most desktops should have some way to put in a second drive), you could install a second drive and install Linux on the second drive. It is generally said that it is not advisable to dual boot Linux and Windows off the same drive, but I have been dual booting off separate drives for years now without issue.
As I gradually found ways to do everything I need within Linux, I found myself logging into the Windows install less and less, and eventually hardly ever.
Depending on whether your PC can hold two separate drives (some laptops have two M.2 slots, and most desktops should have some way to put in a second drive), you could install a second drive and install Linux on the second drive. It is generally said that it is not advisable to dual boot Linux and Windows off the same drive, but I have been dual booting off separate drives for years now without issue.
As I gradually found ways to do everything I need within Linux, I found myself logging into the Windows install less and less, and eventually hardly ever.