In my mind, if it gets you off it is ok for you to do with consenting partners. You don't need to have a certain type or quality of sex life in order to meet other peoples approval.
This really resonates with me. I had to overcome being frigid. That is not something that I could actually share with anyone, and until I had a trusted person in my life that I knew to was safe, I could not even imagine trying to be intimate. I judged myself for being like this, for being broken. I believe that I did this because everybody else was gettin down, so I should be too. I attracted men, why was I so stinkin scared of them? It was as if there was this standard that I was unable to live up to. I came to realize that my sexuality is no longer subject to anything or anyone outside of myself, and I set out to re-learn, and to heal that part of myself, on my own terms and in my own time. I hope that this can give hope to someone out there. You can heal.
I know that I'm not the only one, but I also know how hard it is for anyone to admit something like this in a world that is so overtly sexual. I often over heard persons who bragged about their sexual exploits (men & women), but I've never heard anyone say something like " I really like him, but while we kiss and touch I feel myself leave my body" or " when he touches me, at first it feels good, and then I'm numb and I don't feel anything." Another example " I get really frightened when we get too close physically, even though I understand intellectually that I'm safe..." These were the kinds of things I was experiencing, and I said those kinds of things to my therapist, and that is when my healing began...after I brought it out into the open.
I think you have to start by paying attention to the process that your body is going through, whether it be the manner of arousal, or the lack thereof, and everything in between. You have to explore yourself gently, and with compassion, and the healing will unfold.