It's a tough road Juditha, and not one that's possible to avoid 100% unless you bottle it all up. I've at different times found myself ridiculed, hurt or even the target of hostility, although not to a level I couldn't cope with - e.g. my Mother who has a hang up about conventional religious observance. (being seen going to church) I've no idea why, because she's never been in the least bit religious in any sense that it influences how she lives.
Luckily a few have noticed the positive benefit of spiritual work on me in the past 15 years too.
I suppose in the end life requires and teaches us all to develop a certain 'street smarts' or wisdom in how we handle ourselves in this space.
Buddhism for example is very clear that you only teach or make stuff explicit to people at the level they can accept, and that to do otherwise is both an invitation to trouble and damaging to the teaching as it brings it into disrepute.
There's for example not much point in describing an exotic experience that to you is quite normal to a person that's rooted solely in the physical, and has a lot invested in this - as in is actually scared by any serious suggestion that existence might be rather more interesting than that.
You're in effect threatening that person with a belief system crash.
At best he'll rationalise that you are a nutter and have laugh about you with his friends, with the result that you get branded as the crazy guy/lady. Really get through to him (or her), and you risk possibly triggering the sort of emotions that result in intense fear and hostility.
Luckily burning at the stake went out years ago.
What you can get away with depends a lot on your audience and your ability to come across in other ways to them as 'normal'. (
what's normal?) I do OK up to a point, and at times can pass myself off as ordinary but there's other times I can be very wacky indeed.
I know from experience to be very cautious around pious/conservative/religious (includes supposedly spiritual)/institutionalised and frightened people with a very picky approach to things (which of course is indicative of a fear that things might be other than as they imagine) - because I just can't lock myself down tight enough not to trigger them. (e.g. I had a 'fun' experience with our local protestant vicar a few years ago when i though I'd lucked into a chance to discuss comparative religion - he preached the most awful prejudices about Buddhism and spirituality to me when I thought he'd have had enough training to know it for what it was)
I've found it best to be cautious in what I say. I'll quietly mention the benefits of meditation to a person I know who might benefit from it. I'll go on to conversationally add some practical stuff I've been taught about relating to life and existence if it's likely to help. Buddhism, or the fact that I'm drawing on teaching from very old traditions gets a mention to somebody who seems more open. And if it naturally leads there I'll talk some of the more exotic possibilities like the opening of compassion as above.
I'd almost never get beyond barely mentioning the possibility of the sort of experience we routinely share notes on here, and almost never would discuss it overtly. Even among Buddhists there's many that react badly to too much information - there's this sort of primal fear that kicks in.
I think it's ultimately a consciousness, openness or experience issue. When you've been there and processed the experience with the help of study and others in the same space it's wholly natural, but it's bewildering to somebody who's just not. Most are not very good at just letting stuff be, so it's inevitable that their minds will grasp for a support that makes them feel better - resulting in their ridiculing or even being aggressive towards the person in question.
It's in the end a matter of compassion too. We shouldn't try to force stuff on people at a rate faster than what they can handle. Nor are we required to bring trouble on ourselves. Skillful means are required.
It's easier said than done, and I'm sure you've heard most of this before - but go carefully and hang in there Juditha...