Julia Roberts has always operated on instinct — the same gut-level intelligence that made her choices on screen so consistently surprising and so consistently right has guided every significant decision in her private life too, and the people closest to her have long described a woman whose ability to read a room, read a situation, and read the intentions of the people around her is as finely tuned and as quietly formidable as any instrument she has ever brought to a performance.
So when something began to feel wrong — not dramatically, not with the sudden clarity of a crisis but with the slow, creeping certainty of a person who trusts themselves enough to take their own instincts seriously even when every surface signal says everything is fine — Julia Roberts paid attention, and what she found when she followed that feeling to its source was something that reordered her understanding of her own life, her own relationships, and her own sense of what she was willing to accept from the world, triggering a transformation so complete and so quietly radical that the people who knew her before and after mark it as the clearest dividing line in the story of who Julia Roberts was and who she has chosen, with full deliberate intention, to become.