When he started dating his girlfriend, he thought he knew the rules.
Monogamous. Committed. Just the two of them.
What he didn’t know was that she and her best friend had a long history of including each other in past relationships. Not secretly cheating — openly having threesomes with previous partners. On both sides.
He only found this out recently. About a week before everything blew up.
Casually. Like it was trivia.
Then came the real question.
Would he be interested?









His Immediate Reaction
He didn’t hesitate.
“F—k no! I’m never doing that!”
Not polished. Not diplomatic. Not workshop-approved phrasing.
But honest.
He describes himself as very monogamous. The idea of sharing a partner — or being shared — doesn’t just make him uncomfortable. It grosses him out. Not morally. Not judgmentally. It’s just fundamentally not for him.
And that should have been the end of it.
Except it wasn’t.
The Real Twist
His girlfriend told her best friend what he said.
Now the best friend is offended.
And the girlfriend thinks he should apologize.
Not for saying no.
But for how he said it.
Here’s where it gets messy.
He didn’t say anything to the best friend. He reacted privately to his partner. A raw, instinctive response to something that caught him off guard.
Now he’s being asked to smooth over hurt feelings… for not wanting to sleep with someone.
Is “No” Offensive Now?
The community response was almost unanimous: this is a two yes, one no situation.
If even one person says no, it’s over. No negotiation. No persuasion. No guilt campaign.
One commenter put it bluntly:
There’s no legitimacy behind being offended because your friend’s boyfriend doesn’t want to f—k you.
Another pointed out something more subtle — and arguably more concerning:
Why did the girlfriend share his raw reaction in the first place?
When partners talk privately, especially about sensitive topics, there’s an expectation of safety. He didn’t insult the friend directly. He didn’t mock her. He didn’t shame her lifestyle.
He just reacted strongly to something that clashes with his boundaries.
Instead of managing that conversation maturely, the girlfriend passed it along.
That’s what turned a private boundary into a public offense.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
Several people raised concerns that go beyond wording.
![She Wanted to “Share.” He Said No. Now Her Best Friend Is Offended. [Reddit User] − There’s no legitimacy behind being offended because your friends’ boyfriend doesn’t want to f__k you. It’s not your problem. NTA.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/wp-editor-1772283840848-9.webp)













If threesomes have been a recurring dynamic in her past relationships — and with the same person — is this a casual suggestion?





Should He Apologize?
There are two separate issues here:
-
The boundary – He absolutely does not need to apologize for saying no.
-
The delivery – Could he have phrased it more gently? Probably.
Something like:
“That’s not my thing. I’d be really uncomfortable with that.”
would have been softer.
But shock reactions aren’t polished TED Talks. They’re instinct.
And he wasn’t speaking to the friend. He was speaking to his partner in what he assumed was a private moment.
If anyone owes someone a conversation, it might actually be his girlfriend — for turning a personal boundary into a social issue.
What This Is Really About
This isn’t about sex.
It’s about respect.
If monogamy is a hard boundary for him, then the conversation should have ended there. No guilt. No social fallout. No apology tour.
The fact that he’s now being positioned as the problem for not wanting a threesome is… telling.
Because consent isn’t just about saying yes.
It’s also about being allowed to say no — without punishment.
So What Now?
He has three realistic options:
-
Apologize for tone (not for the boundary).
-
Stand firm and refuse to apologize at all.
-
Reevaluate whether their long-term expectations align.
The last one is the hardest — and possibly the most important.
Because if this isn’t just a one-time suggestion, but a recurring desire on her side, this relationship might be heading toward a deeper incompatibility.
And that’s not something a carefully worded apology can fix.


















