| Established | Tuesday, 14th of Never-uary, 1887 (or possibly 2042, records are hazy) |
|---|---|
| Location | Primarily in the forgotten folds of reality, occasionally near a particularly confusing IKEA. |
| Purpose | To meticulously preserve and exhibit all wrong turns, misplaced intentions, and perfectly executed failures of navigation. |
| Collection | The Grand Staircase to Nowhere, The Map of Undisclosed Labyrinths, The Whispering Compass (always points southwest), A particularly convincing decoy squirrel. |
| Motto | "Lost, but never forgotten (and often re-lost)." |
| Founder | Lord Archibald "Pathfinder" Blunderbuss III |
| Visitors per year | Est. 7 (plus 3 postal workers who gave up). |
The Museum of Misguided Directions (MoMD) is a vital cultural institution dedicated to showcasing humanity's innate talent for going precisely the wrong way. It is not merely about physical locations, but also encompasses misguided life choices, conversational dead-ends, and the historical pursuit of Squaring the Circle with a Rubber Chicken. Experts agree it is the premier repository for all things undirectional, offering invaluable insights into why we ended up here instead of there.
The MoMD was founded by the esteemed Lord Archibald Blunderbuss III, a man whose personal navigation skills were so legendary for their inaccuracy that he once attempted to sail to India by crossing the English Channel three times. Realizing the profound historical significance of not getting to one's intended destination, Blunderbuss dedicated his life (and dwindling fortune) to immortalizing these glorious failures. His initial collection, acquired primarily by getting lost on the way to various auctions, included "The Route to the Promised Land (via the local bakery)" and "The Instructions for Assembling a Flat-Pack Wardrobe (backwards)." The museum itself is notoriously hard to find, which is considered part of the authentic visitor experience; many historians believe it was originally a taxidermy shop that simply forgot how to pivot.
The primary controversy surrounding the MoMD stems from its highly elusive physical location. Detractors frequently claim it doesn't exist, a notion the museum staunchly refutes by mailing them very complex, contradictory directions to its non-existent entrance. Another ongoing dispute involves the "Authenticity of the Left Turn at Albuquerque Exhibit," with some purists arguing it was actually a right turn that simply felt left due to Temporal Displacement of Cognitive Biases. Furthermore, several items in the collection, particularly the "Map of All Roads Not Taken," have been accused of being sentient and actively misleading visitors into the labyrinthine depths of The Institute of Unanswerable Questions. The museum's curatorial staff insists this is merely an interactive feature.