Tomorrow, March 25th, marks the one-year anniversary of Collectors MD quietly entering the world. There was no press release. No big launch. No marketing campaign. Just a simple idea that had been sitting with me for a long time: something in the modern-day hobby needed to change. Not the love of collecting. Not the nostalgia. Not the friendships or the stories that bring people together year after year. Those things are beautiful. But the environment around collecting had fundamentally changed.

The hobby had become faster. Louder. More transactional. More monetized. Always-on. Platforms were built to remove friction and logic. Live streams ran around the clock. Algorithms pushed us toward the next purchase, the next auction, the next opportunity we might miss out on. And for many collectors, including myself, the line between collecting and compulsion had started to blur.

For years, I didn’t have language for this. I just knew the feeling. The late-night scrolling. The “one more box” mentality. The rush of a big hit followed by the hollow feeling that settled in when the excitement faded. The sobering moments of wondering, how did I spend that much money so quickly? These experiences weren’t unique to me. I started hearing the same stories from collectors everywhere. People who loved the hobby deeply. People who grew up with cards. People who had no intention of “gambling” but slowly found themselves stuck in cycles that felt eerily similar.

What struck me most wasn’t the behavior itself. It was the silence around it. Collectors were struggling, but almost nobody was talking about it. When Collectors MD launched, it wasn’t designed as a business plan. It was simply a space to begin that conversation. A place where collectors could step out of isolation and speak openly and honestly about the pressures of the modern hobby without being judged or dismissed.

What happened next surprised me. Collectors from all over the country started reaching out. Some shared stories about emotional, mental, and financial distress. Others talked about losing control inside break rooms or auction platforms. Some simply admitted they had been feeling uneasy about their relationship with collecting and didn’t know where to turn or who to talk to.

And then something incredible started happening. Collectors began helping each other. People shared their personal experiences. They talked about mistakes. They talked about boundaries they were trying to build. They talked about slowing down, collecting intentionally, and rediscovering what originally brought them into the hobby in the first place. What began as a conversation soon became a community.

Collectors MD is rooted in support, accountability, and change and we will always stay true to that mission by creating a space where people feel understood, where honesty is encouraged, and where real, lasting progress is possible without losing the connection to what they love.

Over the past year, Collectors MD has grown into something far beyond what I ever imagined. We’ve built weekly peer-support meetings. Collectors are connecting through group chats and accountability groups. We’ve partnered with recovery organizations, treatment centers, and state councils. Breakers, card shops, and platforms have gotten behind and endorsed our #RipResponsibly initiative as it continues to gain real traction across the hobby. Conversations that once felt uncomfortable are now happening openly throughout the entire hobby ecosystem.

But if there’s one thing this first year has taught me, it’s this: collectors were never the problem. The modern environment around collecting has changed dramatically, and many collectors have simply been trying to navigate that shift without the tools, the language, or the support necessary to effectively do so. Collectors MD exists to help fill that gap. Not to shame the hobby. Not to minimize the joy of collecting. But to create awareness, guardrails, and support so the hobby can remain something positive in people’s lives.

The reality is that collecting will always carry a certain level of excitement. There will always be anticipation, big hits, and moments that make us feel like kids again. Those things are part of the magic. But when the pace of the hobby accelerates faster than our ability to process it, that magic can rapidly turn into pressure.

Collectors MD is about restoring balance. It’s about reminding collectors that the hobby doesn’t have to control us. We can still choose how we engage with it. We can slow down. We can set boundaries. We can collect with intention instead of impulse. And most importantly, we don’t have to navigate those choices alone.

As we enter year two, my vision for Collectors MD is simple. That more collectors feel comfortable speaking openly about their lived experiences. That the hobby continues to evolve in ways that prioritize people over transactions. And that the next generation grows up in an environment where excitement and responsibility can coexist.

The hobby should add to our lives, not take from them. Thank you to every collector who has shared a story, joined a meeting, sent a message, or simply read these reflections over the past year. This community exists because of you.

Collectors MD is a movement. It’s a community. It’s a shift in how the hobby shows up for the people inside it – not just at the highs, but in the moments that actually matter. One year in, and we’re just getting started.

#CollectorsMD
One year ago we started a conversation the hobby didn’t know it needed. Today, that conversation has become a community.


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