Schools
UHD Alumni Brittany Perez Is A Voice For The Unseen
Beginning in her early teens, Brittany Perez was becoming a statistic that is all too familiar these days.
October 05, 2021
Beginning in her early teens, Brittany Perez was becoming a statistic that is all too familiar these days.
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She was homeless.
βCouch surfing was my thing,β she said. βI literally lived out of a box for five or six years. I didnβt have my first cell phone until I was 19,β the 32 year-old said.
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Perez, who grew up in the Cy-Fair area, attended seven different high schools before graduating from Westbury High School.
As a homeless youth and not having anyone in her life to help her, she had to do whatever it took to survive even it meant getting involved with the wrong people. But she eventually had a wake-up call.
βI realized that I needed to do something different and change my life,β she said. βI needed to break away from these generational curses that have plagued my family and now my life. I didnβt want to be a statistic β¦ and something had to change.β
Born with a birth defect (ventricular septum defect (VSD) or a hole in the heart) and diagnosed with PSD (post-stroke depression), doesnβt hinder Perez to press forward in life. βIβve always been a fighter who wants to make a place for myself,β she said.
Perez came from a large family in which she and her siblings experienced the trauma gamut from domestic violence to an alcoholic parent. βWe all wanted to be better,β she said. βFor a long time, I wondered β¦ βwhat did I doββ¦ Iβm just here trying to exist.β She also took on the role of parent to her younger siblingsβfrom helping with homework to getting them ready for school. βMy parents didnβt go to college and my siblings and I wanted our lives to be different and better.β Two of her siblings have recently graduated with their masterβs degrees.
After graduating from high school, Perez worked at what she described as βdead-endβ jobs. But she eventually forged a path as a Special Education paraprofessional for almost seven years. At one point, she wanted to be a Special Ed teacher, but something was missing and βI fell into social work and it completely changed everything about my life.β
In 2019, Perez was completing her associateβs degree at Lone Star College-CyFair when she enrolled at UHD while homeless and working full-time.
Her coursework through UHDβs Social Work program (housed in the College of Public Service) played a significant role in better understanding how trauma affected her life and family. The Social Work program βtaught me transparency, speaking and living in your truth and how to use my voice correctly thanks to my social work family.β She also credits her βamazing professorsβ especially Dr. Angela Goins (Lecturer, Social Work) and Dr. Heather HonorΓ© Goltz (Interim Assistant Chair, Criminal Justice and Associate Professor, Social Work).
βI learned so much about the trauma that people endure and why they act a certain way,β Perez emphasized. βLearning all these things in social work made me re-evaluate my life by asking β¦ βwhat have I done and why are these things happening to me?β I realized that it wasnβt anything Iβve done, but that when situations have come my way, I have to adjust and look at the big picture. It made me understand with a different perspective β¦ if it werenβt for these classes I donβt think I would have the outlook I do now.β
This past spring, she graduated with a bachelorβs degree in Social Work (summa cum laude) with the ultimate goal to open a homeless shelter and community center for LGBTQ youth with strong emphasis on transgender youth of color.
βItβs very disheartening that there arenβt shelters out there for this population who fall through the cracks. I want to be a voice for them β from advocacy to policy change and legislation. I want to teach the community about who we are and what we face on a daily basis.β
Her activism is most evident in Houston as a longtime LGBTQ+ advocate. Presently, she serves, for the past three years, on Montrose Grace Placeβs Advisory Board and as a Direct Mentor Lead and a Youth Outreach Volunteer at the Montrose Center where she helps homeless and insecure youth as well as being the voice of youth in schools for the gay-straight alliances, or GSAs. She also is the Director of Outreach for the Houston Chapter of Epsilon Xi Gamma, Inc. (founded in Houston 10 years ago), which is the only all lesbian and Ally Greek Order dedicated to only serving LGBTQ+ first and LGBTQ+ in all four regions of the U.S. Perez also serves as on the Pride Houston Youth Scholarship and Rights Are Human! committee.
βIβm very passionate about LGBTQ+ advocacy,β she emphasized. βI want to give back to those who are misrepresented or unseen because I was one of them. Iβve never hid who I am and I know firsthand what itβs like to be discriminated against in school and the workplace. Systemic racism in education itβs not okay and I want to break those barriers.β Last year, Perez was featured in the Houston Chronicle on the affects COVID was having on the LGBTQ+ communities.
One of her immediate future plans is to continue to be an active Gator alumna.
βWhen you discover people with the same mindset that you can call your friends who respect the value of you as a person and the work you do β¦ itβs life-changing, Perez said.
βUHD changed my life. My experiences at UHD encouraged me to look at the world differently in a more positive way. The friends Iβve made at UHD, which I will cherish for the rest of my life, are now an extension of my family. Iβm so grateful and blessed to be a Gator. If they ever create a masterβs in Social Work, I will definitely be there β¦ 1,1000th percent! UHDβs diversity and inclusive community is something I needed that I didnβt know I needed.β
About the University of Houston-Downtown
The University of Houston-Downtown (UHD)βthe second largest university in Houstonβhas served the educational needs of the nationβs fourth-largest city since 1974.
As one of four distinct public universities in the University of Houston System, UHD is a comprehensive four-year university led by President Loren J. Blanchard. Annually, UHD educates more than 15,000 students; boasts more than 60,000 alumni and offers 44 bachelorβs, nine masterβs degree programs and 16 fully online programs within five colleges (Marilyn Davies College of Business; Humanities & Social Sciences; Public Service, Sciences & Technology; and University College).
UHD has the most affordable tuition among four-year universities in Houston and one of the lowest in Texas. The University is noted nationally as a Hispanic-Serving Institution, Minority-Serving Institution and Military Friendly School. For more on the University of Houston-Downtown, visit www.uhd.edu.
This press release was produced by the University of Houston-Downtown. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.