Joe Marshall has pretty much always known his gender didn’t match the sex he was assigned at birth.
“I was very aware of gender by age 3,” Marshall, a 27-year-old trans man who lives in Camas and graduated from Camas High in 2010, explains. “I think my third birthday party was the last time I wore a dress.”
Although his immediate family supported Marshall when he told them he was male, not female — and most people in his close circles had always thought of him as a boy, anyway — Marshall balked at the idea of coming out as a trans teen at Camas High School.
“There was really no support network in the area (in the early 2000s) … and I struggled to find books that felt relatable,” Marshall says.
As a 15-year-old just starting his gender transition journey, Marshall was eager to immerse himself in the region’s young LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer) community and meet other teens questioning gender constructs and sexuality.