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By Luz Michelle

Artwork by Justin Negard

Disclaimer: It’s okay to laugh—this is a humor column! We welcome your Dear Luz questions, but we’re legally obligated to say this is not a substitute for real advice by professionals.

Dear Luz,

My sweet, well-meaning neighbor has asked me to join three different MLMs in the past year—collagen packets, magnetic socks, and now some “gut powder” that smells like sadness. I’ve said no politely, but she won’t quit. Can I ghost her?

-Trapped

Dear Trapped,

Babe. We don’t ghost in Westchester; we gracefully exit with boundaries.

Tell her straight-up: you admire her energy, but MLMs aren’t your vibe. Be kind, be clear and maybe offer to support her muffin game instead.

Say it once, mean it, and move on with your fabulous, pyramid-free life.

Dear Luz,

My grandma just discovered emojis, and now her texts are pure chaos. Like, full strings of random icons with zero explanation. The other day she asked me a question and added a badger. What does that even mean? Do I give her an emoji tutorial or just let her live?

-Lost in

Dear Lost,

Let her live. She survived dial-up and war. If she wants to talk to you in

you respond with

and call it love.

You don’t teach her Emoji 101. You thank the universe she’s actually texting and hope she never learns what the eggplant really means.

Dear Luz,

My girlfriend loses her mind if I don’t text back within an hour. Legit, my phone was broken last week, and I couldn’t reply for two hours, so she started texting my friends to check on me! How do I get her to chill?

-Caught in the Text Storm

Dear Caught in a Storm,

This isn’t about your phone; it’s about her trust.

You’ve got two options: couples therapy or a real talk where you both lay down what’s going on. Tell her you love her, but you’re not glued to your notifications.

If she can’t take on a broken phone without launching a search party, there’s a bigger problem to solve.

Dear Luz,

I love my job, but my boss? Actually crazy. It’s making me dread going in. There are a few changes that could fix everything, but I’m scared to speak up. Do I risk it or just quit?

-Walking on Eggshells

Dear Walking on Eggshells,

Fear is a trap. But silence is a slow death.

Put your ideas in writing, like a killer deck or a slick proposal—something she can’t ignore.

If she shoots it down, start prepping your exit plan. You deserve a workplace that inspires you, not one that terrifies you.

This article was published in the September/October 2025 edition of Connect to Northern Westchester.

Luz Michelle
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Luz Michelle has channelled her unique life experiences and background into a successful comedy career, gracing stages such as Caroline's, Gotham Comedy Club, The Stand, The NY Underground Comedy Festival, The North Carolina Comedy Festival and more, with her malapropisms and unique style. As Founder of Hard Headed Comedy™, a comedy entertainment company, Luz produces live and streamed showcases featuring a diverse mix of established and up-and-coming comedic talent.

Creative Director at Connect to Northern Westchester |  + posts

Justin is an award-winning designer and photographer. He was the owner and creative director at Future Boy Design, producing work for clients such as National Parks Service, Vintage Cinemas, The Tarrytown Music Hall, and others. His work has appeared in Bloomberg TV, South by Southwest (SXSW), Edible Magazine, Westchester Magazine, Refinery 29, the Art Directors Club, AIGA and more.

Justin is a two-time winner of the International Design Awards, American Photography and Latin America Fotografia. Vice News has called Justin Negard as “one of the best artists working today.”

He is the author of two books, On Design, which discusses principles and the business of design, and Bogotà which is a photographic journey through the Colombian capital.

Additionally, Justin has served as Creative Director at CityMouse Inc., an NYC-based design firm which provides accessible design for people with disabilities, and has been awarded by the City of New York, MIT Media Lab and South By Southwest.

He lives in Katonah with his wonderfully patient wife, son and daughter.