I am a bit hesitant to get involved. This is a very, very tough situation and I have strong feelings on both sides.
DoorMat, judging by your choice of a forum name and the information you've relayed, it appears you believe your H's obsession with dressing is more important than you are, and he is putting your needs behind H's own agenda.
It's a struggle. It's possible that H believes now this is out in the open, it's OK to push it and take every opportunity to dress. But it sounds like there were communication and prioritization issues before this ever came out. I don't know, but it's possible that this is coming out because H feels he has nothing left to lose by going for it, so to speak, and that you're pretty set that this isn't what you expect or want from a partner.
My wife and I play in some very open and vulnerable places mentally, and it still took me five years of a completely open environment before I could really come out to her. It scared her for a while. but she made it safe for me to come out.
I make it OK for her to express her worst and best sides, with complete security that I won't ever go for the things that she's shared with me, both good and bad. In exchange she does the same for me.
I challenged that trust when I held this back. I had talked myself into thinking it wasn't real so I misled her as well as myself. At some point, I had to bring it out, I couldn't talk myself out of it any more and it was affecting our communication.
Once it was out, though, I went at her pace even when it was almost impossible to control myself and not just run for the panty drawer!
I can understand how I might have behaved if trust wasn't involved. I can see how it could have quickly spiraled out of control and degenerated into something awful if trust wasn't a foundation of our relationship.
Was your trust gone for you long before you found out? Is there a chance you could repair the breach or has the levee broken forever?
Our relationship is far from perfect, but we both had the advantages of a failed first marriage where trust was lost (or never gained). We were honest about who we were, or at least as much as we could be, when we wrote to each other well before we ever met.
The problem is, no one knows 100% about themselves. We all make mistakes and make incorrect estimates based on our own flawed assessment of ourselves. I guess the question is: is there room for someone to update their "resume" as they learn, or did they lie on their resume to get the job (and did they do so knowingly or out of ignorance)?
I don't think any of this is advice at all...just a few thoughts about trust and relationships. I hope something here helps either one of you get through this tough time. If you love each other, and if you truly want to repair what you've broken, then you have to start with trust and you have to keep your commitment to yourselves and each other no matter how hard it gets. I don't think any relationship can work long-term without it.
Meghan