Hi Gemma.
Okay, I'm going to guess what MAY be going on here, using my own experience and a little intuition. You can take my observations for what they're worth or leave them - they're intended as food for thought only.
I am not claiming to be right about any of this, mind you, and frankly, it sounds like you AND your husband are equally lost about WHY he's acting so inconsistent and giving you mixed messages regarding this situation.
I’ve been in my Poly relationship for about 9 month now. The man is a good friend of my husband’s, one i’ve known for a while. Feelings have grown and we care/love each other.
My husband wants me to stop my sexual relations with him. He says he doesn’t mind me doing fun stuff with him just not sexual anymore.
He said he thought it would be a one time thing for me to experience and here we are going on nearly a year. He has mentioned his feelings before but then he says he’s fine.
The first and most obvious thing that struck me is WHO the other man is: a "good friend" of your husband's. Even if your husband was truly poly at heart, a close friend would often make the "messy person list" - i.e. somebody to avoid becoming sexually and/or romantically involved with at all cost, because the risk of complicating matters and ruining a long-standing friendship or losing their supportive presence (should one of the men become jealous, or in the event of a break-up) are deemed too high.
You say your husband thought this was just going to be a "one time thing". Did he assume that, or was a one-night stand or short-lived fling what you initially agreed to, Gemma? Because if you did, he may be within his "rights" to claim you broke the terms of your agreement.
Either the fact that this is your husband's close friend you're sharing sex with -AND/OR- the fact that he believes you somehow reneged on your agreement to only "experiment" sexually with another man COULD be the source of your husband's jealousy and insecurity. I say insecurity, because it seems clear that your growing feelings for the friend have taken your husband by surprise, and not in a pleasant way.
He didn't bank on you and the friend entering into a full-blown relationship and the fact that you seem happy and don't want to end things makes him feel uncomfortable/insecure (most likely because he feels threatened by the possibility that you might end up loving the friend "more", or even leaving him for this other man one day.) You don't go into the nature of your husband's disability, but if it impacts his ability to have successful sex with you in ANY way, this may be another source of jealousy, as your obvious enjoyment of this aspect with the other man MAY increase his feelings inadequacy in this department.
Clearly, sexual non monogamy in and of itself is a "breach" of traditional marriage vows, but this probably matters less than the emotional "cheating" your husband may feel you're indulging in. If your agreement was for you to have a bit of "fun" on the side, he probably didn't count on you falling in love with his friend, and is trying to rein in those feelings by curtailing the sexual aspect of your connection.
I’ve nearly ended it several times but my husband keeps being hot and cold about this whole thing.
He runs more hot when it becomes more sexual for us. I’ll come home from my bfs and he knows i’ve Had sex with him. He finds that hot then we have some great sex.
But then the more time I spend time with my boyfriend he gets hesitant. ...
I just don’t think he expected it to become long term. For me I’m Pretty content I love being with my husband and my bf.
It’s become more than just sex. [/QUOTE]
This sounds like your husband is going around in circles with some internal conflict.
There is definitely internal conflict in your husband's mind and heart. As I see it, there could be a few vastly different reasons for this:
On a moral level, IF your husband is monogamous at heart, old-school conservative, or pretty religious, he MAY feel as if it's just plain WRONG for a wife to want to sleep with someone besides her spouse, let alone to love them in a romantic sense.
Moreover, his morality surrounding the belief that a wife "should" remain faithful may conflict with his own sexual fantasies and desires. For example, he may harbour voyeuristic or cuckold tendencies and enjoy knowing you've recently slept with another man, and in turn get off on hearing about the details or even witnessing/feeling/smelling the evidence - yet this might cause some cognitive dissonance if, afterwards, he experiences guilt and regret that he enjoyed the "kinky" aspect of sharing you.
Hence the hot/cold, push/pull he feels about this poly V situation. When he's horny, for example, he may agree or even push you to do things with his friend, or ask to hear about them, then later regret it and ask you to dial it down until his fantasies get the better of him again. Do you think this might be part of it?
I know it is, and has been, for me. I am the "hinge" in my relationship (V-triad). My partners are both monogamish with me, but very occasionally we've played as a group, mostly in an online format, and this is slowly becoming more frequent.
Moreover, my two partners used to be sexually involved with each other before either of them were with me, so there's always a slight fear they'll one day decide they prefer each other to me. On the one hand, it turns me on to fantasise about the three of us together sexually (we have been, once, in person) or even imagine just those two together. But if ever my partners' convo approaches anything too flirtatious in a way that excludes me, or they behave like they're "too close" in a romantic sense, I start to feel the green eyed monster gnawing at the pit of my stomach. Certain thoughts and fears can reduce me to tears or nausea pretty quickly, and specific acts and words between them have caused me to meltdown before, so I can relate to your husband's experience, as well as yours, as the hinge.
Sitting around for hours talking to someone who is all "I don't know, I don't know" is an exercise in frustration.
Yes, it is. But occasionally the person really does NOT know what the exact problem IS or how to articulate it. They just know they don't feel comfortable.
And yes, if they've willingly agreed to be involved in a polyamorous union, it IS their job to analyse their own feelings and responses, do some research, and if they still can't deal with their feelings, get some professional help - OR ELSE STOP doing, or agreeing to someone else doing the behaviour that causes them stress.
If I've learned anything throughout my (accidental) poly "journey", it's that there is a vast difference between FANTASISING about non-monogamous or group sex scenarios, and actually being okay with participating in them.
It seems clear to me that your husband hasn't quite got there (yet?), Gemma. This is why he waffles and runs hot and cold; agreeing to something one minute and trying to "ban" the same behaviour when it all gets too much.
He needs to decide. It IS his decision whether or not he wishes to remain in this relationship IF you decide not to accede to his request to stop sharing sex with your boyfriend/his friend. And of course, it's YOUR decision who you wish to share sex with. But know that if you choose NOT to end your sexual relationship with the other man, it MAY spell the end of your marriage sooner or later, if your husband cannot make peace with it.
Just because you are the hinge in this situation in this V and have two sweeties doesn't mean that you have to carry everyone else's sticks for them.
Sometimes [B said:
I see hinges burning out because they think that that is part of the hinge job -- carrying everyone else because they "get" two sweeties in recompense. [/B] I think when 3 people enter a V thing? Everyone is an adult, they consent to be there, and they consent to carry their own fair share of the load of being and participating there.
It's not pile all the baggage on the hinge.
Unfortunately, it's often the way it goes for hinges; especially those whose partners are - like mine - essentially monogamous. The hinge may feel greedy, selfish and/or guilty that they're in a "privileged" position, and try to make up for that by doing everybody else's job for them.
Guilt shouldn't be part of the poly landscape, or part of any relationship for that matter, but realistically speaking it's difficult to avoid completely when things appear to be "unbalanced" in one partner's favour.
As is often said, communication is the key to successful polyamory, but many people are not naturally skilled communicators, and "reluctantly poly" men may well have a have great difficulty isolating and communicating their own feelings and needs without overt displays of anger, blame, resentment - or conversely, shutting down emotionally.