Dictionary
sends me a new word and its possible meanings each day to my inbox. Most of
which obviously I dint know existed, because otherwise you would have seen them
extensively splashed across this blog. Today they sent me a word, ambivert.
According
to dictionary, Ambivert is one whose personality type is intermediate between
introvert and extrovert. As soon as I read it, I knew I was one.
Basically,
I am not an introvert. I do not sulk in a corner of a party hall. I do not stew
in my worries or success. However, at the same party if someone asks me to
dance I may need a diaper. And that, my friend, is a quality of an ambivert. If you think
about it, most of us are. Remember our teachers? They scream and yell at us all
year. And the day our parents are called for the meeting at school, they are
all sweet and extremely well behaved, and our parents are like ‘ You better stop
talking about your teacher like that…she is a female version of Swami
Vivekananda …just look at her!’ and there she is, saree clad with a halo
circling around her head. On other days when she yells the saliva
droplets travel at the speed of light to reach the backbencher’s nose, and there are fumes instead of the halo. So
she is the best example of an ambivert. It can also be technically defined as-
intelligent situational smartness or the lack of it.
We, ambiverts, are basically the convertible type. I mean, when we encounter negative
criticism, we transform ourselves into extroverts. Whereas when there is a general
knowledge quiz, we are introverts, or even invisible! We are completely
flexible and this does not mean that we have no character or backbone; it just that we are chameleons in human
form, newly christened as ambiverts!
My
almost-three-year-old was an introvert
until he was one and a half. He would sit on my lap, wishing that nobody looked
at him or pulled his cheeks. Later he became an extrovert. He would just walk
into parties and transform into a tiny party animal. He wouldn't even turn to check
if we were still around. Now he is almost three, and is in nursery. His teacher
tells me, ‘He is so cute he doesn't even cry or yell over here’ and our
neighbors say ‘what a cute little guy you've got.. We don’t even get to hear
his voice…he is the silent type isn't he? You are so lucky!’ My husband and I are
completely speechless at this stage and we just pretend to agree as our
eardrums are already partially damaged by the person in question.
But at parties, he is the kind of boy anybody
would love to pamper and cuddle with. He puts up this innocent look and angelic
smile, the combination that floors many female toddlers. And by ‘floors’ I
meant, that when nobody is looking it is possible he could literally FLOOR them. That is how one displays the quality of being an ambivert.
There
is another word called antevert. According to the dictionary, it is a verb used
‘to displace (the uterus or other body organ) by tipping forward.’ It was when he tried to antevert me that I ended up in the
labor room.
Image Courtesy:Google images.