Young People to the Front podcast

Myriah on Foster Care, Knowing Your Rights, and Reclaiming Your Story

0:00
44:37
15 Sekunden vorwärts
15 Sekunden vorwärts

Episode Notes:

Myriah didn't set out to become an advocate. After emancipating from foster care, she started sharing her story and the work just took off from there. From being featured in the LA Times, to representing her community as Miss Compton Princess, to serving four years on the LA County Board of Supervisors Youth Commission, she's spent years making sure young people in care are in the room before decisions get made, not after.

In this episode, she talks about what it actually looks like to center youth voice in institutional spaces, the difference between youth-led healing and adult-led extraction, and why knowing your rights in foster care is something most young people don't find out until after they've already aged out. She also gets into her work with the Alliance of Children's Rights, the educational rights video series she helped create with the Office of Child Protection, and why it matters that young people leave these conversations with closure and not open wounds.

Oh, and she's also Chef Smiley. She talks about how cooking became therapy during her time in care, how she turned that into a career during the pandemic, and her dream of one day bringing culinary skills to foster youth.

In this episode:

  • How advocacy finds you before you find it
  • The LA County Youth Commission and why lived experience belongs in policy rooms
  • Educational rights foster youth aren't told about until it's too late
  • What makes a space truly youth-led vs. youth-used
  • Culinary arts as healing, hustle, and hope

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