Audio Series > Coming of Age
Album: Gold Audio 11: It's Another Fine Day
Episode: 154
Lesson/Theme: Adolescence; growing up.
Bible Verse: Deuteronomy 31:6; Matthew 10:30; 1 Timothy 4:12
Characters: Donna, George, Jimmy, Connie, Whit
Writer: Phil Lollar
Sound Designer: Bob Luttrell
Original Air Date: May 18, 1991
Last Air Date: July 31, 2008
Description:
After a three-year absence, Jimmy Barclay has returned to his journal to pen his thoughts and feelings about life. Lately, several "strange" things have been happening to him. Donna has been teasing Jimmy because he's started shaving. He's not getting along with his mom and dad. His body seems to be falling apart. His chest hurts, his bones ache, and his voice sounds like a cross between a frog with laryngitis and a country-western singer.
To top it all off, Jimmy's been thinking a lot about Connie lately. He gets a funny feeling in his stomach when she's around. Jimmy discovers what the strange feeling is while rehearsing Romeo and Juliet at the Little Theatre in Whit's End. Connie is playing Juliet to Jimmy's Romeo, and during the balcony scene, Jimmy realizes he's in love with Connie! But while he's trying to figure out how to tell her, he learns that Whit has cast Artie Powell in a role that Jimmy wanted to play. Jimmy confronts Whit about it, demanding to play the role. Whit refuses, so Jimmy quits the play and angrily storms out of the theatre. Unfortunately, he leaves behind his journal, which reveals his feelings about Connie.
Jimmy rushes back to Whit's End and learns that Connie has seen his journal. Jimmy apologizes to her, feeling terrible that Connie discovered his feelings for her that way. But Connie tells him that she only saw the journal, she hasn't read it. Completely embarrassed, Jimmy retreats to the Wonderworld tree house. Whit joins him and talks to Jimmy about wha's been happening to him. Jimmy thinks he's going crazy, but Whit says he's actually on the verge of adolescence. Whit explains that growing up is inevitable, so Jimmy should try to enjoy it. And it will be much easier by if he remembers that Jesus is always with him.
Questions:
Why did Jimmy feel he couldn't talk to his father? What should he have done to overcome those feelings? What do you think is the best part of growing up? The hardest part? What did Whit mean when he said Jimmy was not alone?