On June 28, Tia Mowry made a statement at the BET Awards in Los Angeles that put an end to the typical discussion about celebrity relationships. She wasn’t discussing timeline rumors or Instagram metrics. She was discussing her nervous system. “What was really important for me,” she said to PEOPLE, “was someone who really calmed my nervous system.”
That’s a specific method to explain falling for someone. It was a nervous system that had finally calmed down, not fireworks or butterflies. The distinction undoubtedly matters more than it may seem to someone who spent four years rebuilding after a divorce.
The man she’s describing is Javone Williams. Mowry hard-launched the relationship back in May, uploading an Instagram carousel of holiday photographs from Cabo San Lucas – sunlight, ocean, the kind of images that suggest a purposeful choice to share rather than a slip. Williams emerged in one of the beach images, smirking at the camera while Mowry chuckled and leaned away. The caption kept things simple. “A little sunshine, a little peace, and a much-needed reset.” The subtext did the rest.
Mowry divorced actor Corey Hardrict in 2023 after fourteen years of marriage. Cairo, 7, and Cree, 14, are their two children. By her own admission, her headspace about dating in the immediate aftermath was not positive. She described it as negative, which is both reasonable and, she came to learn, actively acting against what she stated she desired. She started paying attention to what she was putting out — what she was saying about relationships, what she was presuming, what she was drawing in with her energy. Whether or not you agree to manifestation philosophy, the practical outcome was the same: she become more conscious about who and what she was creating place for.
“You have to become who you want to date,” she stated at the BET Awards. “You attract what and who you are, but you have to become that person yourself first.” She spent four years in what she described as seclusion — tough, she conceded, but also really satisfying. That framing is important. It’s not a tale of enduring loneliness or waiting for help. It’s about someone who used the time to figure out what she genuinely wanted, and then stopped settling for anything that didn’t match it.
Williams didn’t actively seek for her when she arrived. “It wasn’t like I was necessarily looking,” she replied. “It just kind of happened.” For those who have truly put in the effort, it is the version of the narrative that usually holds true: the relationship develops when the individual is already content without it, which is precisely the kind of groundedness that makes a new partnership lasting rather than compensatory.

There’s something refreshing about how Mowry talks about this connection. No ambiguous privacy gestures followed by calculated disclosures. There are no transparent “I’m focusing on myself” deflections. She went to the BET Awards and declared, clearly, that she’s at peace, that she’s present, that there are no games being played. She is 47 years old, has two children, and leads a very public life. It seems that she is tired of presenting an inaccurate picture of her personal life.
