Hey Adwen,
I commend you on your emotional strength. You sound like an amazing mother and a great person. I feel for you in a way that most people cannot. A lot of your story rings very true to my own... but I play the role of the villain (husband). While it sounds like there are many differences between your husband and me, there are an uncanny number of similarities.
I have been fighting my feelings since I was 11 years old (now 33). My wife knew that I was cross dressing by our third date. Fast forward to 3 years ago (Married 6 years) and I felt like I could not fight the urge to transition anymore. My wife and I were in a bad place and I (at the time) believed I choked it down for our marriage. I now believe it was out of fear of the transition, not love of our marriage. I waved it off as a sexual fetish to my wife and myself and moved on. In November last year the feelings came back so strong it was like a tidal wave crashed over me. My newborn son was 8 months old. I told my wife "So I think I want to transition". Literally in that way. I rocked her world, again. I did it without thinking about her reaction or how any of it could affect my family. My wife told me she couldn't be with me if I transitioned.
I immediately decided to go to counselling and she was very supportive. It was never enough for me though. I would always harp at her for not supporting me in way X or way Y. I started laser therapy. I bought clothes and started dressing most of the time at home. I attended support groups and occasionally stayed out late at clubs. Money wasn't really an issue because we both have good paying jobs, even while she was on maternity leave. Through it all she supported me, all while being at home full time raising our new baby. It was never enough for me. It was about moving forward. It was about the ecstasy of the new experience.
Things started getting really rocky. We fought and the trust and respect for each other started to fade. When we were at or worst, we would talk lucidly about divorce. About separation of assets and liabilities. It was at this point I started realizing that without my wife I was free to move forward with my plan unhindered. I thought if we were not married, I could fully transition and that voice in the back of my head would finally be satisfied.
Then the most shocking thing happened. After having a conversation about what would happen after we divorced, I told her I would likely transition. We talked a bit about it and I mentioned I had no desire for bottom surgery. That night she came to see me crying at 4 am. She said she would stay with me if I transitioned as long as I didn't get bottom surgery. She had no idea that was what I was thinking when I said transition. I was ecstatic! It was like a dream come true.
We worked on our relationship. It was good for a few weeks, maybe a month. It started to come crashing down again. I had wanted to go to marital therapy together again and work on the marriage, but she didn't. I later found out that she thought I was talking about my transgender therapist for counselling. We crumbled more and finally we broke.
We obviously had issues in our marriage well beyond the trans stuff, it was just the spark that lit the powder keg. Ultimately I feel that my wife and I could not and should not stay together because I was too selfish and walked all over her. We also had very opposite personalities, we had little in common, we had poor communication, I was in denial (and probably still am) about my sexual desires and we both wanted very different lives. I will point out that while there were times when I would have my wife watch my son so I could go out and do my TG activities, but I never ignored him like your husband did. He is the most precious thing on this planet and the love of my life. It is the one fact that she will agree on, I am a good father.
Since I started hormones a few months ago, the urgency and the fog clouding my mind has cleared. I have had great conversations (with many tears) with family about who I am. I realize how selfish I am/was and struggle every day to put the needs of the important people in my life above my own, especially my son and my soon to be ex-wife. I have a long hard road ahead, but I want to be a better person no matter what physical form that may take.
I wish I had a quick fix or helpful advice for you Adwen, but sadly if he is anything like how I was, you do not have an easy time ahead. It is likely that no matter what you do, it will not be good enough for him. In his mind, the world revolves around him, like he is real and everyone else is just manifestations conjured up by his own mind. It is almost a form of king syndrome, where he is just destined to have good things happen to him all the time and that hardship is something for everyone else. It is likely that he does not even think about how you might be feeling, not as if your thoughts or feelings are irrelevant to him (I am sure he cares about you), but that he cannot even conceive that you would think something other that what he is. To his mind, what he says is so logical that it is ludicrous to think otherwise. That is how I often felt and if he is as similar to me as he seems, he likely has these same core characteristics, regardless pf whether he is fully aware of them or not.
I fear that your only hope is to find a way to break through to him on an emotional level about how you truly feel and what is going on in your own head. How you might feel betrayed by his disregard for you and your son. If he can see the pain and anguish this is causing you, maybe he will snap out of it long enough for you both to start counselling. Its a long shot, but have him read your post and mine. Maybe a lot of what I am saying will resonate with him? If he cannot find a way to control his selfish impulses and widen his tunnel vision, it will only end the same way as it did for me. This doesn't mean he has to stop what he is doing, simply slow down and do it all as a family. Have an honest talk with him, because it is possible he is already starting to think how I did about divorce and the freedom it will give him to pursue his goals unhindered.
I apologize from the bottom of my heart for the way he is treating you and what you are going through. I am sorry that good, strong, caring people like you and my wife have to endure the pain and emotional suffering caused by those of us who are too blind to see what is in front of them. Know that if I could go back and do it all over again, my desire to transition would not change, but I sure as hell would have done everything I could to change the way I acted and make sure my wife had all the support and respect she deserved.
If you ever want to ask me questions or simply talk more about what your husband might be thinking, please do not hesitate to PM me. Your story hit very close to home with me and I would love nothing more than to see you two succeed where I failed. Best of luck Adwen, know that you have the support of all the amazing people here on this forum and that you are not alone. Most of all, know that people can chance if they truly want to so there is always hope.