I have to admit I rarely see someone admit they want something fast and quick, and if it is legitimate that is okay too....LOL!
Last post in this thread for me.
I didn't say that. I said I wanted something that would give me a benefit for my time, not waste it. I am a director in an investment bank, and have a very long commute. What little time I have for myself is valuable. I wanted something close by, as even a few miles away could be 20 minutes in each direction, leaving me perhaps 30 minutes for classes on
my schedule. And no one teaches on
my schedule.
I meant Allan Lee, not Alan Lee.
Understood. I myself studied at
Alan Lee's for about 10 months back in 1980, and this definitely had an effect on my opinion of available CMA training in NYC. For that 10 months, we ran in place, stood in horse stances, then ran in place some more. Very 'rinse, lather, repeat'. When I eventually asked one of the instructors when we would actually learn SOMETHING, I was told "about two years, we like to weed out the people who won't stick around".
That was a waste of time, and what I want to avoid now. Someplace actually teaching something I wouldn't write off right off the bat because it is taught differently elsewhere, or even everywhere. Further, being a student at "4-H Karate School" I came here (to this thread and forum) without any built in biases against places due to their names, whether that be "New York City Shaolin Center" or "Joey Chips' House of *** Kicking". Patently naive of me in retrospect, but there you have it. I live and on good days learn as well
When I studied in NYC under Sigung Leung Shum, that was a golden age for CMA in NYC. I am sorry if you did not get the answer you wanted, but most on this site will give you recommendations about real or legit schools, especially Shaolin, which is a term easily bandied about and frankly disrespected today.
From the outside looking in, "Shaolin" is a completely meaningless term, overused to the point where it may as well be ignored. Just sayin'.
But,
I did get the answer I wanted, and I got it in the third post of the thread from someone familiar with the system. No need to be sorry
The "cheap" excuse is funny, considering a Shaolin Buddhist robe or a traditional uniform is between $45 and $90, not too expensive. And the sashes are usually cheaper than the belts.
I saw it more as explanation than excuse; part of the backstory, as it were. I would have assumed from the website that gis were originally cheaper or possibly all that was available when they first started using them in Indonesia or wherever, but, I don't honestly care too much about that sort of thing. 99% of the MA schools out there in the Americas want you to wear something they pick, whether it have frog buttons or V necks or patches or come in special colors. If that helps them pay their rent, and fosters some esprit de corps among the students, a one time uniform fee won't hurt most people. For me, a person with a number of gis already, this would have been free. I don't need what I already have.
If cost is a factor, go to Bok Le Tai or another shop off of Mott St. and buy a uniform cheaply, purchase a video, and learn Shaolin the really cheap way.
While I myself am not in the category, that would certainly be an available (if not completely viable) option for anyone in NY who would seek out CMA training as cheaply as possible. I will myself likely skip this school altogether and go with a Hapkido school I have found nearby instead. It meets my requirements of affordability, nearness to my office, not complete BS, and I already have some Hapkido training to build on.
(Little secret - I found this NYC Shaolin Center because they are part of the Google Ads on the top of every page on this very site. If not for the ad right here on MartialTalk, I never would have found or even heard of it.

)
Once again, thanks to all who responded to my query. I honestly didn't expect any responses, so this was all very enlightening for me.
jim