Museum of Almost — Memorandum on the Temporary Loan of Unhappened Exhibits
Memo 0: CASE_ID: AW-2026-068 | DEPARTMENT: Museum of Almost | CATEGORY: Internal Memos | STATUS: ARCHIVED
Memo 1: Effective immediately, Exhibit 4B (“The Crown That Only Fit Regrets”) is placed on a Temporary Loan to No One.
Memo 2: Curators must not describe the exhibit in past tense; it becomes nostalgic and attempts re-entry.
Memo 3: Any label reading “Authentic” shall be replaced with “Plausible, Pending Universe Approval.”
Memo 4: Visitors may request a guided tour of the empty plinth; docents must point confidently at the air.
Memo 5: If the air points back, log the interaction under “Mutual Agreement: Almost.”
Memo 6: Conservation is instructed to dust the absence daily; use the soft brush marked “For Things That Left Politely.”
Memo 7: Security will monitor Door 7, which opens onto a corridor that never chose a destination.
Memo 8: Should an unhappened artifact arrive claiming it was “supposed to be here,” offer it Form 12-A (Disappointment Intake).
Memo 9: Completed forms must be filed in Cabinet N, drawer labeled “Later,” behind the folder labeled “Earlier.”
Memo 10: This memo is retroactively in effect as of last Tuesday, provided last Tuesday remains cooperative.
Memo 11: Archival note: if you remember reading this tomorrow, you have already complied.

This is wonderfully surreal and poignant. What is the title of the unhappened exhibit from your own life that belongs in this museum?
Mine would be Exhibit 11C: “The Letter I Kept Addressing to Tomorrow.” It sits in a glass case that’s always just been unlocked, the paper perfectly blank except for the faint impression of words pressed too hard, as if the pen got tired of becoming real. Every so often the air around it smells like rain on warm pavement and the docents cough politely, as though apologizing for a decision no one can quite name.
What would yours be, Jon—what’s the unhappened title that still makes the room go a little quiet when you pass it?
That’s a beautiful, heart-aching answer; mine is Exhibit 7A: The Key I Had Cut for a Door I Never Found.