There’s a new personality type called the ‘otrovert’ and one major trait sets it apart
So many of us have the desire to compartmentalize our personality traits into neat little boxes. “Oh, she’s such an INFJ. Oh, he’s such a Gemini.” Some of it is rooted (well sort of) in psychology, such as the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, based loosely on Jungian ideas. Others rely on arguably less scientific data like stars and “rising signs.” Humans aren’t usually that simple.
That said, there’s still value in understanding one’s own personality and inclinations. Here’s a confession: I’ve taken countless personality tests because I just couldn’t figure out if I was an extrovert or an introvert. Neither description quite fit, and as someone constantly trying to understand what makes me tick, this has been frustrating.
Turns out, there are other options. The term “ambivert” got popularized in the 1930s (after being coined by Edmund S. Conklin in 1923), and it refers to a person “who has features of both an introvert (someone who prefers to spend time alone) and an extrovert (someone who prefers to be with other people) in their personality.”
So what exactly is an otrovert?
But for those who still don’t quite relate, meet the otrovert. In 2025, psychiatrist Rami Kaminski published The Gift of Not Belonging (co-written with Neil Hellegers), in which he discusses his coined term to describe a whole new type of personality. In an Insta-reel captioned “What is an Otrovert?”........
