Re: If not wing chun..then what?
Originally posted by S.Teebas
[B]What would you guys be doing if for some reason you had to stop your WC training? (eg your sifu leaving town, or you have to move and there’s no WC .etc…or for whatever reason)
What styles would you be interested in doing?[/B]
Some years ago, I found myself in precisely that situation. My two earliest Wing Chun teachers did in fact move out of town. Switching arts wasn’t more than a moment’s consideration. Wing Chun was what I had set out to learn, and there was no change in my motivation to do so.
As I had to find a new teacher anyway, I decided to seek one whose manner and method of teaching is most suited to me. The trend indicated that teachers were just going to move away whenever they liked anyhow, LOL, so I might as well select one based on criteria other than location. The teacher I found happens to live 3000 miles away. Convenience was indeed not the driving factor, LOL.
It was necessary to build my own training group and develop other hands to work with routinely. Training time with my teacher alternates between my own travel, and hosting him for intensive weekend training workshops with the other group members.
Folks that take for granted paying a monthly fee to show up at class a few times a week should test out my lifestyle. 
Picking another art would have been a lot easier, but not remotely as satisfying. Same for settling on convenience at the expense of quality, which for me would be an unpalatable trade-off.
At this point, it is almost unfathomable for me to consider changing arts. To continue my Wing Chun training I would travel farther if I had to. How much worse could that get, LOL. Should my teacher become completely inaccessible (heaven forbid), I would continue working and learning with compatible others, or even just on my own till new opportunities arose and circumstances improved.
If for some reason Wing Chun were no longer an option, and if I were a tad younger, I might do a closer investigation of Aikido or Yi Chuan. If I could not travel, I might consider Taiji, but mainly for fun and health, not for fighting.
In all likelihood though, and at my stage in life and beyond, I would probably end up doing some yoga and investing time at a top notch shooting range. That and enjoy the opportunity for gardening more often.
Whatever the circumstances, what I would do is find a good teacher in whatever vocation or avocation I chose to pursue. What I would not do is settle for whatever is convenient regardless of quality. A martial art, in particular, is too much of a personal investment in time and effort to waste on something second rate, and the opportunity costs far too great.
Regards,
P.S. I trust you do consider me one of the guys. 