When I was a young boy of 7 years old, my dad (the oldest of 7 siblings), asked me for my money (kept in a Parkay butter tub)--all of 45 cents, I think...and he presented me four Star Wars figures that were on cards from behind his back. At this age, I noticed a "gleam" in my dad's eyes that lasted through 1983 with Return of The Jedi. You see, he never had many toys as a kid being the oldest of 7 to an abusive, alcoholic father. He and his brothers closest in age to him couldn't wait to get out of the house and join the military.
Fast forward many years later, I get adopted and somewhat spoiled (to include baseball card collecting too); well, at least as best as my parents could afford. I never had the AT-AT or the Imperial Shuttle, but I did have most other Star Wars vehicles and playsets and I did get all of the 117 figures including Droids and Ewoks cartoon figures. By the time 1983 came around, I was more interested in chasing skirts, so I have many of those figures still carded. However, my attention shifted with the Star Wars saga on a long hiatus and I got into comics heavily. In the mid-90's, many of the Marvel figures came out that weren't out when I was a kid...so I had to get every Toy Biz figure.
Hit my 30's and really didn't have time for comics, but stayed true to Star Wars and bought up all I could with my job switching from a "job" to a "career".
Now, I have too much stuff and have parted with all duplicates and have focused on 1/6 scale stuff - choosing quality over quantity.
All in all, it is an addiction for me with no cure.
It is tougher nowadays to collect more so than the 90's with many pieces costing much more (I am only imagining due to quality).
I am happy to collect for the most part and becoming more particular on what to keep and what to get part with from the heavier 90's collecting habit that formed.