I wouldn't suggest/recommend anything without knowing what someone was trying to achieve and the problem encountered when trying to achieve it.
Just off the top of my head, you could simply change your location within the VPN, which may get you past the blockers. You could also get a static ip address from your VPN provider (at a cost), which could lessen the chances of being blacklisted, as opposed to a shared ip address. NordVPN, Surfshark, Cyberghost (& others) offer this as an add-on service. You could also choose a VPN with a proprietary protocol such as ExpressVPN or NordVPN making it harder for a firewall to detect that you are using a VPN. Some VPN providers have obfuscated servers which may also get past the blocks. There are loads of articles on the WWW relating to this, if you can sort the wheat from the chaff. Using a VPN to connect to a residential address in another country as you already do, would seem you already have an optimal solution.