When things are going wrong for one reason or another, because mom and dad don't understand or perhaps because his girlfriend is showing signs of being interested in someone else, Jim feels really pressured to set things right, but he doesn't quite know how to get things altogether. He is uneasy and tense much of the time. He feels like a real 'nerd.'
It should be pointed out that this is reasonably normal for most high school kids. In fact, just about all teen-agers go through lots of anxiety over all sorts of things much of the time. They struggle with coping. So much of their time is spent in the doldrums. They are moody and unwilling to communicate with anyone, anyone except their closest friends.
Jim and his friends sneak their way into the local nightspots on the weekends to cruise the scene and to check out the cute 'chicks.' Jim might be a bit tired of his girlfriend Jenny's moodiness and he might actually be considering finding a different 'significant other' for himself. After all, a guy gets tired of always wondering where he stands. How much is a guy supposed to take?
The search for someone new poses all sorts of anxiety and potential threat for Jim. He sees everyone else having a great time, bouncing to the incredibly loud rock and country music (which he can't stand). He's pretty good at premarital 'jive' himself. Outwardly, it is a scene of great happiness, with lots of goofin' off, lots of fun. It's cool... Inwardly, however, it is not so great for Jim or for that matter, not so great for his buddies either.
For most young people, the inward feelings experienced while trying to survive on the social scene are characterized by anything but relaxed emotional comfort. The building of new relationships, in hopes that one will be lasting and mutually rewarding, involves a considerable amount of anxiety-producing risk. Jim asks himself, 'How can I get any girl I'm turned on to, to be turned on by me? What if I fail to impress her,' he asks himself when he gets ready to hit on one of the foxier ones? 'And what if I say something stupid?'
Jim is anxious because with each venture into the unknown, that is, with each attempt to hit it off with someone new, there is an increase in stress and anxiety that comes from the chance of more disappointing rejection. No one wants to get dissed, including Jim. 'You try to be nice, the chick thinks you're a nerd,' he complains.