I think you are trying to figure out whther or not this guy is going to be a "wife beater". He very well may NOT be that, but if he is an emotional abuser, that can be even worse. Do some searching for emotional abuse using popular search engines, and you will see what I am saying.
Here are a few things for you to think about
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Pay special attention to how he treats people who have no way to impose consequences on him for bad treatment (this would include service personnel, like waitresses). By this, I don't mean "is he a good tipper or not", I mean does he look for things to pick at, and complain about. Even more importantly, HOW does he deal with it when he does find something? Does he have a need to give the waitress a lecture about it, insist that the manager be informed, or insist that he/she come to the table and make an issue of it, or does he simply say "may I have some hotter food please". Abusers sometimes need to make a point - they need to be right, and show how important they are.
Do you feel like he is excessively "smart", or that he knows everything about whetever it is you happen to be talking about in a conversation? Often, someone being a "know-it-all" goes hand in hand with them being emotionally abusive. Later in the relationship, this will be used to make their partner feel stupid, like nothing she/he says matters, and to undermine their self-esteem, to make it harder for their partner to think about leaving.
The dried roses thing you mentioned does suggest obsessive jealousy to me. That is a very BAD sign.
I have nothing against religious people, but I see that he is already trying to apply his religious beliefs to your life. This reminds me of behavior I have seen in abusive men before. "You should be the sort of wife that God intended for you to be - it says in the book of [insert last week's sermon here], that a woman should..." Ugh, I HOPE he is not like that. I have seen some who were, in various degrees of subtlety. Is he a fundamentalist?
He has also shown an interest in tracking your computer habits, and knowing who you may be emailing. Two months into a relationship? Bad sign.
Quote:
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That he knows it was fair to not ask him to smoke pot but he felt like I demanded him to or I'd leave him and he resented the ultimatum. That when he feels "demasculinated" like that he makes bad choices.
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He is taking something bad he did, and blaming it on your behavior, and saying his bad choices are someone else's fault. Explaining that if you just wouldn't [insert your behavior here], HE would not do the bad things he does. So see, it's really YOUR fault - because you are not being a "good girfriend" [which will become "you are not doing what a good wife should do"]
Ewwwwww! Classic emotionally abusive guy behavior. I'm not saying this alone is 100% conclusive, but it does not look good, and along with the other stuff, we're getting pretty close.
It is very concerning that he "doesn't want" you to work, so he can spend more time with you. Wait a minute. He works, right? Putting aside that wanting to be with you and know what you are doing every single minute (everybody needs a
little space, except abusive guys) is one of the lesser signs of abusive tendencies, HOW is it going to make it so he gets to spend more time with you, if you both work a 9-5 job? He should want you to do whatever makes you happy, whether that is working or not. If you don't want to work, that is one thing, but he should not be trying to dictate that to you. Often abusive men like to keep "their woman", who they begin to view as an object of what "their wife should be", in the home, rather than having them out among others. This is part about jealousy, but mostly about control.
That link you have there, is how to spot a "batterer". Emotional abusers are much more clever. Almost nobody (save one that I know of personally) has almost all of those characteristics, but any of them should be a cause for concern.
Be EXCEPTIONALLY careful to not get pregnant. That may, in fact, based on the info you have provided, be exactly what he wants. It would represent a massive power shift in his mind in the relationship, which is what abusive guys crave.
I hate to say it, but your man does have abusive tendencies, enough to be concerning.
More importantly, if you didn't also feel it, you would not have posted here and asked about it. THAT alone, the fact that you felt enough of that to be concerned enough about it to ask the question and provide the information you did, should be telling you that this guy is probably not marriage material.
Bottom line,
listen to the friend. Your friend has actually met this guy, and nothing is better for spotting them than an objective friend - and don't discount her point of view so much just because she has been there. Yes, she may be sensitive to it becasue she has been there, but the fact that most people have not seen it, is why so many people unknowingly get into relationships, or even worse, marriages [shudder] with abusive partners.