Wing Chun AZ
White Belt
I live about 100 miles from a Wing chun school. I could only attend 2-4 classes a month. Would it be better to do private lessons or class instructions for a beginner in Wing chun?
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I'd do a mix, at that frequency. You'll get to cover more area with the private lessons, probably. You need the class to have a variety of training partners, which is an important part of developing your skills.I live about 100 miles from a Wing chun school. I could only attend 2-4 classes a month. Would it be better to do private lessons or class instructions for a beginner in Wing chun?
Let's keep your privates out of this, Danny.Privates.
Fundamentals, fundamentals, fundamentals.
Oh You just 'had' to go there...Let's keep your privates out of this, Danny.![]()
If I didn't, @Tez3 would show up.Oh You just 'had' to go there...
LOL...this conversation is going in a bad direction quickly...at my age anything that gets privates attention is exciting!
Good point. Are there other options, even though not wing chun? Does it HAVE TO be wing chun?Is that the only martial arts school around? 100 miles.. That's not a small drive.. 100 out 100 back
In the context of a 100 mile radius I would think there would be other martial art systems around.Also, if you choose to make the 100 mile trek in each direction, be aware that the travel itself may give you burnout.
All that extra committment of time that isn't directly training, is a cost. The initial enthusiasm of a beginner can wane, and travel time can exacerbate it.
Suddenly "I've got to get the lawn mowed" becomes a reason why you miss Saturday's training session all summer long.
Life has other obligations in it, and can be absolutely real and legitimate reasons why you can't train. Perhaps it takes you two hours drive, each way. Add to that a two hour training session, suddenly that's a six hour committment. Add to that grabbing dinner on the way home, gassing up the car, and the general transitional time in between, chatting with classmates on the way out the door, all that stuff. Now it's a seven hour committment, each time you go for a class.
And somewhere along the way you still need to get the lawn mowed...
If it's an evening session during the week, can you spend seven hours after work? Pretty late getting home, then up for work the next day.
Just evaluate the complete picture and take these issues into consideration when you make a decision.
One would think. But, if this is really the best by far, it may be worth the trek. I will travel if I feel the instruction is worth it.In the context of a 100 mile radius I would think there would be other martial art systems around.
The OP can try this site: Martial Arts Schools in Dojo Directory - Dojo Finder
The group class is much better than "teacher - you" private lesson for the following reasons.Would it be better to do private lessons or class instructions for a beginner in Wing chun?
I'd do a mix, at that frequency. You'll get to cover more area with the private lessons, probably. You need the class to have a variety of training partners, which is an important part of developing your skills.
Geezer I live in Cochise county. So I'm looking to go to Tucson for my training. Privates sounds like my best option.I'd say go for public and private lessons for the reasons stated by gpseymour above. Out of curiosity, where in AZ do you live? There's Wing Chun in Phoenix, Tempe, Mesa, Avondale, Flag, Tucson... probably Sedona... Maybe there's somebody closer than you think.