Alumni Story

From the Spirit of Troy drum line to the front lines of community mental health

Double Trojan Micki Smith is on a mission to bring therapy to marginalized communities.

By Kianoosh Hashemzadeh Published on

When Micki Smith BA 鈥15, MS 鈥17 was in high school and thinking about college, her counselor suggested she apply to USC. Smith hadn鈥檛 considered USC because she thought, as a private school, it would be out of reach for her financially. But she dutifully sent in her application, and when she was accepted, she decided to go on a campus visit before making her decision.听

鈥淚 was blown away by how gorgeous the campus was,鈥 Smith recalls. And lucky for Smith, 鈥渨ho grew up in band,鈥 she had an opportunity to see the USC Trojan Marching Band perform. She remembers leaning over to her mom and whispering, 鈥淚 think I鈥檓 going to join the band.鈥澨

Smith marched with the Spirit of Troy for four years while she was an undergraduate at USC. And through a combination of scholarships and work-study positions, the psychology major was able to make the numbers work.听

Attending graduate school was always 鈥減art of the plan,鈥 Smith says, and psychology opened up a variety of paths. As she began to think about what type of master鈥檚 degree she wanted to pursue, with the help of her advisor, she landed on either social work or marriage and family therapy. 鈥淎fter doing my own research, MFT programs resonated more with me and the work I wanted to do,鈥 Smith says. Working with individuals, families and couples appealed to her, and when she told family and close friends of her decision, they thought it was a vocation well suited to her. Smith loved her undergraduate experience at USC, so selecting 海角论坛鈥檚 Master of Science in Marriage and Family Therapy program was an easy choice.

While Smith gained invaluable skills via the MFT program and particularly lauds the program for its focus on social justice issues, she also made lifelong friendships. Members of her cohort are 鈥渧ery tight knit,鈥 Smith says. They congratulate one another on professional and life achievements, from new jobs and promotions, to weddings and births. The program, Smith explains, is 鈥渘ot just academic; it鈥檚 also self-reflective. It鈥檚 really innovative, the way that they have it set up, because it allows you to view the therapeutic experience from both sides鈥攁s a client and as the future therapist.鈥

Smith has stayed in touch with Professor of Clinical Education Mary Andres. She looks up to her, considers her a mentor and often turns to her for job references. Since the double Trojan is now an accomplished therapist in her own right, she鈥檚 enjoyed seeing her relationship with Andres evolve from student-professor to colleague. Smith, Andres says is 鈥渁n ideal combination for a successful USC MFT student because she was intellectually curious, aligned with the mission of serving communities with high needs, and courageous about moving out of her comfort zone and into a leadership position.鈥

Since completing the program, Smith has worked at the in various roles. IRL provides mental health services for low-income children and young adults in Los Angeles County and the surrounding area. She started as a field-based mental health therapist. In this role she provided mental health services to clients from a variety of referral sources鈥攕pecialized foster care, schools and the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services. She met with her clients where they were at鈥攍iterally. She would come to whatever location was easiest for them to get to, whether it be their home, school or Starbucks. 鈥淭his is community mental health,鈥 Smith says, 鈥渋t鈥檚 essentially bringing [services] to them in the most convenient, accommodating way so that they don鈥檛 slip through cracks.鈥

During her time in the field, Smith says she 鈥渓earned so many different interventions and ways to [help] individuals, [from] playing with a two-year-old to talking to a 20-year-old with any range of diagnoses鈥攄epression, anxiety and a lot of trauma.鈥 In her next role, she continued to meet with a handful of clients and started conducting in-depth, court-mandated assessments of children who had been removed from the care of their biological parents due to allegations of abuse. Now, as a program manager she oversees a team of case managers and clinicians.

The work can be heavy, but Smith has a strong self-care system in place. She starts her day by going to the gym, reads fiction, loves to color and leans on her loved ones when she has a particularly challenging day. After nearly six-and-a-half years of working in community mental health, Smith has also learned 鈥渉ow to leave work at work,鈥 and she鈥檚 never opposed to seeking her own therapy when she feels she needs it.听听

When Smith thinks about where she wants to be in the future, she thinks of being a change maker and debt free. She鈥檚 only four years away from reaching student loan forgiveness under the Department of Education鈥檚 Public Service Loan Forgiveness plan due to her work at a qualified non-profit organization. As for being a change maker, Smith would love to run her own non-profit eventually and continue to work with 鈥渕arginalized communities that wouldn鈥檛 normally seek out mental health [services.]鈥澨

This type of work, Smith says, was emphasized at 海角论坛. Smith found that her professors and her cohort were passionate about the intersections of mental health and social justice and working with hard-to-reach populations, whether it be LGBTQ+ individuals, minoritized populations or incarcerated individuals. If 鈥渢hat鈥檚 the work you want to do,鈥 Smith says, 鈥淯SC is the place to be.鈥

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