Karolin Tsarski, from Estonia, spent a decade learning how to achieve “deep sexual satisfaction” because she found regular intercourse painful. He claims that he can now orgasm for up to 10 minutes without any stimulation. The 33-year-old, whose ability was reported in detail in a scientific journal, believes that every woman has the power to “awaken” her “orgasmic energy”. The medical examinations apparently showed that Ms. Tsarski, who charges clients 60 60 for a one-and-a-half-hour consultation on how to improve their sex life, was not lying. And the video of the bizarre experiment shows Ms. Tsarski gasping for breath at a hospital examination table. He claims to have acquired the ability to peak without any stimulus from “years of yoga and tantric training”.
In a video recording one of her orgasmic experiments, Karolin Tsarski said she believed it was something “any woman” could achieve. This chart shows how Karolin Tsarski rated her orgasms from different erogenous zones. NGSO refers to orgasms that are not stimulated by the genitals. Each orgasm is scored on three individual scales. The sensory (orange bar) refers to how orgasm feels according to 13 different adjectives, for example “pulsed”, from a possible score of 65. Emotional (the red bar) is a rating of how orgasm feels in terms of emotional intimacy and ecstasy with a possible score 45. The rating (the blue bar) scores pleasurable satisfaction and relaxation of orgasm at 30. Shows that it ranks its NGSO as similar to clitoral orgasm in terms of sensory but lower in terms of her emotional intimacy and ecstasy from her other peaks

WHAT DOES SCIENCE SAY ABOUT THE WOMEN’S ORGASM?

Orgasm is a feeling of intense sexual pleasure that occurs during sexual activity. According to the NHS, it can also be called “coming” or “peak”. Both men and women have orgasms. For women, there is no biological advantage to an orgasm, as it is not believed to play a role in conception. It is considered a purely pleasant experience without any other advantage.
Female orgasm is a complex neuroendocrine process that is unlikely to have developed by chance. Scientists have asked Ms. Tsarski to rate her peaks on an orgasm rating scale used in sex studies. The results showed that she rated her unstimulated orgasms – the ones she taught – as enjoyable as those of her clitoris or anus. However, they did not provide the same levels of emotional intimacy and ecstasy as conventional climaxes.
Further analysis showed that doctors measured her hormone levels to see if her own orgasms actually had a measurable effect on her body. The experiment was performed three times, each one week apart. Each time Tsarski had a blood test 30 minutes before the test, immediately after orgasm and 30 minutes after the test. For the first time, Mrs Tsarski brought herself to the climax without stimulation for five minutes. He did the same in the second case, but for 10 minutes. In the last test, sit down and read a book for 10 minutes to act as a control.
Blood tests revealed that her prolactin levels had risen by 25 percent immediately after her five-minute orgasm. Prolactin is a hormone that previous studies have suggested is produced by women after orgasm. In the 10-minute orgasm test, prolactin levels were 48% higher immediately after orgasm. No significant increase in prolactin was observed in the blood samples obtained from the book reading test. Ms. Tsarski’s prolactin levels were noted to be particularly high on the day of the 10-minute test. The study’s lead author, psychologist James Pfaus, explained that this may be because Ms. Tsarski is at a certain stage in her menstrual cycle.
No other hormone measured in the blood samples showed similarly significant increases as prolactin. In a video taken shortly after the climax, which was linked to the magazine, Ms Tsarki said: “What I just did, I know any woman can do.” The so-called non-sexually aroused orgasms (NGSOs) have been reported in the scientific literature in the past. But the debate has surrounded the truth of such experiences and such orgasms are measurable. Normally, the stimulation of the erogenous zones of the body in combination with the mental aspect of arousal and sexual desire leads to orgasm in both men and women.
But women have reported orgasms in non-sexual situations, such as during sports / exercise or breastfeeding.
Ms. Tsarski, who is cited as the study’s co-author, said her journey to orgasm without arousal began to fight her vagina, an uncontrollable condition in which the vagina tightens suddenly and painfully when something is inserted into it. She started her training in tantra yoga with the following: ‘learning postures, breathing techniques, body locks in order to learn how to wake up and feel the energy and then learn to guide it and move it upwards.’ “In addition, I did pelvic floor exercises, chest massages and practices to relieve shame and guilt. “I learned to relax and let go, I accepted the image of the body and they brought increased awareness in everyday life in general” Ms Tsarski said the sexual benefits came later as her education progressed, enabling her to overcome her vaginas.
The study was published in the journal Sexual Medicine.