About the Job
About the Job
Julia Colman is a warm, open-hearted, curious woman who believes deeply in communication. She loves introspective questions, meaningful conversations, and believes that connection comes from asking the right things. But during her ride with Halyte, she admits a painful truth: She is in a relationship where she cannot talk to her partner at all. Her curiosity has nowhere to land. Her questions live only in her head. She has spent months trying to initiate deeper conversations with her boyfriend—questions about dreams, fears, childhood, values, future—but he shuts down emotionally every time. This has created an emotional drought in her relationship that is slowly breaking her. Her energy is that of a woman trying very hard to convince herself everything is “fine.” Julia grew up in Buffalo, NY, in a home where emotional openness was encouraged: Her mother asked deep questions at dinner • Her father shared stories about his childhood, work, and feelings • It was normal to talk about dreams, disappointments, fears Communication was safety. So when Julia moved to NYC, her instinct in relationships was to ask meaningful, connective questions—because that is how she expresses love. • Studied cognitive psychology • Fell in love with understanding how people think, behave, and form attachment • Very socially connected; the “listener” among friends • Had relationships that ended because she “over-communicated,” but she always assumed the right partner would appreciate her curiosity.
More Roles For This Project
Julia Colman
New York's In Here
About the Job
Julia Colman is a warm, open-hearted, curious woman who believes deeply in communication. She loves introspective questions, meaningful conversations, and believes that connection comes from asking the right things. But during her ride with Halyte, she admits a painful truth: She is in a relationship where she cannot talk to her partner at all. Her curiosity has nowhere to land. Her questions live only in her head. She has spent months trying to initiate deeper conversations with her boyfriend—questions about dreams, fears, childhood, values, future—but he shuts down emotionally every time. This has created an emotional drought in her relationship that is slowly breaking her. Her energy is that of a woman trying very hard to convince herself everything is “fine.” Julia grew up in Buffalo, NY, in a home where emotional openness was encouraged: Her mother asked deep questions at dinner • Her father shared stories about his childhood, work, and feelings • It was normal to talk about dreams, disappointments, fears Communication was safety. So when Julia moved to NYC, her instinct in relationships was to ask meaningful, connective questions—because that is how she expresses love. • Studied cognitive psychology • Fell in love with understanding how people think, behave, and form attachment • Very socially connected; the “listener” among friends • Had relationships that ended because she “over-communicated,” but she always assumed the right partner would appreciate her curiosity.
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