Maybe im just not understanding him. His reasoning is that he doesnt want anyone interfering with our relationship and thats understandable after just coming out of a big family feud.
For my $0.10 worth of psychology of males (I am one, for whatever that is worth) I think he “gets it”. Meaning, I think this is more about issues of “intimacy” than it is about “interference”.
I don’t know who had the big family feud, nor is there any information of what the basis of the feud was about. But I fail to see how a “feud” would have anything whatsoever to do with you getting a roommate.
A bit of plain English: 60 years ago we referred to him “spending the weekends” as a “near occasion to sin”.
Engaging in sexual intimacy when you are nowhere near marriage is a recipe for disaster; it has an all too frequent and all too likely component of walking the walk of sexual intimacy for the sake of the self rather than for the sake of the other. In short, it is NOT a total self-giving; it tends to be a “taking”. And yes, that can be both sides, but men are particularly likely to be seeking sex outside of marriage for selfish self-centered reasons.
Congratulations on having a house. Dave Ramsey would be proud of you.
It is your house; if having a roommate helps A and B as you list them, your boyfriend should be among the very first to approve. If he is not, that rates as a “flag”. Something is being said, or not said, that has zero to do with “interference” - or, it has a whole lot to do with that. Last time I checked, most people have family after they are married; anyone who is super sensitive to anyone else “impinging” on their marriage is going to be a very difficult person to live with, Not to mention they have marks of being controlling.
And as part of this - since you are either engaged or right on the precipice in intimacy you should not be engaged in, a year away from an engagement and even farther from a marriage - why are you not already engaged (that is a question for you - we don’t need to know).
And pardon me for being suspicious, but what else has he objected to which has not made perfect sense? Again, we don’t need to know the answer.
I would strongly urge you to contact (Google) the Chastity Project (Jason Evert) and buy and read one or more of his books. Now is the time to spend , not just on avoiding sexual intimacy, but learning why doing so is not just about “a mortal sin”. It runs far deeper into the relationship between men and women, and between husbands and wives.