Teacher who also worked as ‘Orgasm Pope’ sex coach who teaches over-45s how to spice up their love lives is fired by outraged Austrian school
- Monika Rahel Ring Called Herself the ‘Orgasm Pope’ Online
- She ran a service that taught clients how to have an “explosive sex life.”
- Her bosses fired her, claiming she had destroyed their trust in her
An Austrian teacher who taught over-45s how to lead an “explosive sex life” under the name ‘The Orgasm Pope’ has been fired from a primary school.
Monika Rahel Ring, 47, was immediately fired from her part-time teaching job just days before Christmas after the local school board found out what she did in her spare time.
Her bosses claimed she had ‘permanently destroyed the trust’ they had in her by running the motivation service.
Although she was never nude in her posts on TikTok and Facebook, which advertised her services that promised clients to achieve an “explosive sex life with multiple orgasms,” the school board said her side hustle was “incompatible” with her job as a high school teacher primary school. .
Paying clients accessed her sessions via Zoom, and she said she never mentioned she was a teacher in any of her social media posts.
Monika Rahel Ring, 47, (pictured) was fired from her part-time teaching job with immediate effect just days before Christmas
Her bosses claimed she had ‘permanently destroyed the trust’ they had in her by running the motivation service
Monika went by the name ‘Orgasm Pope’ online and claims she never mentioned she was a teacher
A letter to Ring, who had worked at the school since 2016, from the education authority of Upper Austria province, reviewed by local media, reportedly read: ‘As a state teacher you are of course obliged to present yourself appropriately in public.
‘Such generous information with messages about your own sex life goes too far.’
The head of the school board, Alfred Klampfer, said in a statement that the decision to fire Ring was made after “careful consideration.”
Ring worked just 15 hours a week as a teacher at the school in Mühlviertel, northern Austria, but was told by her principal in early December that she was a “24-hour teacher.”
She told local media that she refused to delete her profiles when asked, and rejected a later offer of an amicable termination, claiming: ‘That would amount to an admission of guilt.’
She also says she denies the claim that she did not report part-time employment to her employers. ‘I informed the school director in February 2023 that I had registered an energy supply company.’
She is about to file a lawsuit to get her job back, with her lawyer Manfred Arthofer telling local media: “I would have thought that the education directorate would be a little more enlightened in the 21st century.”