Extrovert: what your word says about who you are right now
Other people are not an audience for you; they are the water you swim in.
Extrovert comes from the Latin for turning outward, and that is exactly where you go to find yourself: into the room, into the voices, into the middle of the thing. You are the person who thinks by talking, who does not know what you believe until you hear yourself say it. Other people are not an audience for you; they are the material you work in, the way a swimmer works in water. A gathering does not drain you. It returns you to yourself, louder and clearer than the quiet ever could. You walk into a flat evening and it tilts toward you, warms, starts to move. That is not performance. It is metabolism. You process the day by putting it into the air and watching how it lands. What Extrovert names, right now, is someone who reaches first and asks why later, who would rather be in the conversation than certain of it. You keep the current running at the table. You notice when a person has gone quiet and you go toward them. There is real generosity in that, a willingness to spend yourself in company. It is who you are today, in motion, out loud, turned toward the light of other faces.
Underneath extrovert, the reading most often finds the Flame rhythm, the pattern moving under the behavior.