Trystan Reese admits that to some people, the life he has built with his partner, Biff Chaplow, and their two children, Hailey and Riley, can seem a bit mundane at times.
“Our life is mostly picking up soccer balls and driving to Girl Scouts,” he told NBC Out at their home in Portland, Oregon.
But Reese is quick to point out that as a gay trans man married to another gay man and raising two children together, the life he and his partner have built together is a life that many LGBTQ individuals before him could have never experienced.

“I was in Texas last September, and I was talking to this older gay man in his 60s, and I told our story, and I asked, ‘Were you able to be a parent?’ And his eyes just swelled up with tears, and he said, ‘Oh sweet heart, I could never have done that,’” Reese recalled.
But for Reese and Chaplow, being a parent is indeed their reality, and the two men have been sharing their story of love and parenthood with others in the hopes of showing that many paths can exist when it comes to making a family.
Their path started seven years ago in Los Angeles, when the two met at a brunch hosted by a mutual friend. At the time, Chaplow was in a relationship with another person, but once that relationship ended, Chaplow and Reese began dating.
“When I started dating [Reese], I knew from the beginning that he was transgender,” Chaplow said. “By that time, I had done a lot of internal work and felt very comfortable in my sexuality and gender. I figured out that body parts matter a lot less than we think they do.”
“We know a lot of transgender men who have babies. We have several in our close friend circle. So it does not seem that strange to us."
For Reese, the attraction to Chaplow was immediate. “I’ve been a gay trans dude for like 14 years,” Reese explained. “I’m used to other trans men [asking], ‘Why would you transition to be a man only to be with another man?’ [I tell them] because 'I’m gay, I’m not going to pretend to be straight.'”
For Reese and Chaplow, the first year of their relationship was spent doing the things that many new couples do. They attended parties together and took weekend trips to Las Vegas or Palm Springs.
“I feel like the first year … is something totally different than the rest,” Chaplow said. “It was a really good year, but it’s not really us.”
That’s because in 2011, Chaplow got a call from his sister’s social worker saying his sister’s two young children were about to be removed from his sister and put in foster care — unless Chaplow was able to care for them.
That’s when Riley, 3, and Hailey, 1, came to live with Reese and Chaplow.
“To me, it’s always wrong to refuse to help someone when they have the need and you have the ability,” Chaplow said.
Reese agreed, though initially Chaplow and Reese thought there was a possibility the two children would be returned to Chaplow’s sister. But after the situation deteriorated, the two men filed for emergency guardianship of Hailey and Riley and years of legal proceedings followed.
It was during this time and shortly after Reese and Chaplow got married and moved the family to Portland, that Reese took a moment to step back and take a look at the life they were building.
“For me, as a trans person, finding someone who was going to fall in love with me, and then want to be with me, that was not supposed to happen,” Reese said.
“And so it was like, 'Where did I hear that lie, and where can we use this tiny family that we’ve built to try and turn outward and tell other queer people … there are more opportunities available than you may have thought?'” Reese said.

