I figured I'd start a new thread instead of going off topic:
I can fully appreciate your current situation and your resulting feelings. If I had to do it all over again, at this point in my life, I probably couldn't make that type of commitment either.
However, when I was younger, I did not have such concerns or considerations, my whole life was ahead of me, and so I went for it, at an extremely high opportunity cost. I basically gave up a chance to chase another dream of mine, which included attending harvard and eventually working on wall street. Instead I chose to attend school on the west coast so I could learn hapkido from a person who is considered one of the greatest, if not the greatest, practitioner that has ever lived. Everyone I asked sat up a little straighter and said it was a golden opportunity that I couldn't pass up. So I went for it, again at great personal sacrifice and cost. But I gained a lot also.
To me, it was worth it, and I would do it again if I could reverse time and was faced with the same choice.
I know others on MT have made similar commitments to the martial arts in the pursuit of their dreams.
Fantastic. Many of us don't have that freedom. I have a job, I have family, I have other obligations. I have enough trouble scheduling weekend seminars and clinics... But nobody knows that until you tell them -- and for most of us, it would be a serious set of limitations.
I can fully appreciate your current situation and your resulting feelings. If I had to do it all over again, at this point in my life, I probably couldn't make that type of commitment either.
However, when I was younger, I did not have such concerns or considerations, my whole life was ahead of me, and so I went for it, at an extremely high opportunity cost. I basically gave up a chance to chase another dream of mine, which included attending harvard and eventually working on wall street. Instead I chose to attend school on the west coast so I could learn hapkido from a person who is considered one of the greatest, if not the greatest, practitioner that has ever lived. Everyone I asked sat up a little straighter and said it was a golden opportunity that I couldn't pass up. So I went for it, again at great personal sacrifice and cost. But I gained a lot also.
To me, it was worth it, and I would do it again if I could reverse time and was faced with the same choice.
I know others on MT have made similar commitments to the martial arts in the pursuit of their dreams.