I think it depends a lot on the situation. I would need a safe person to fly long distance, but not to drive to the next State. I think it's up to each person to figure out what works best for them.
Hi Teebs
A couple of thoughts about a safe person, if your most fearful situation is being far away from home then this to me is a common feeling. If you think back to session four, it said that 2000 years ago when man was on the earth pretty much as we are now, that being far away from home was a danger (a biological danger). The reason is you do not know where you are and if there are predatory animals around. Therefore, the thing to do was to travel in groups or (safety person) so that there are strengths in numbers. However, know we still have the same biological make up but we are not in the danger that a person was 2000 years ago. In session, four states that we have a false alarm panic attack when we are alone and there is no good reason for it. To look at his another way say you were afraid of dogs and a big one was coming at you and you start to get anxiety. Then when the dog reaches you, he starts licking you are your hand and wagging his tale. Then instantly you are not anxious because you know what triggered your anxiety is a false alarm I.E. the dog was no danger. In this case, you have something to immediately identify as the alarm and then indentify it as a false alarm. However, what is it that being far away from home that gives you the false alarm reaction. One thing I know is that the false alarm cannot be reduce to a verifiable event such as in the dog situation where you are able to instantly get rid of your anxiety. Perhaps having the safety person there when you are in a stressful situation is your way of identifying that the dog is safe because he did not attack you. Therefore, as you said your safety person gives you the ability, to not feel alone that if something happens to you will be taken care of. These two statements are possibly, where your false alarms come from.
* I don't feel alone
* I feel like if something bad happens they will help me take care of it
* I don't have to hide my anxiety from them
In me, I always listen to myself after being exposed to a situation to see what I say about it. This is where I find the answers to the question of where do my false alarms come? In me, it was avoidance of any sensation of fear and now I am practicing mindfulness to expose myself rather than avoid the sensation. I think the third thought of yours is a healthy thought if you were like me and taught never to show fear and that showing it is a weakness. However, you also have to watch what you say to the other person as there may lay more clues to your false alarm. For example, I could say that I am experiencing dizziness right now and it is because I am thinking “whatever”, this is an objective observation. If you say to the person that I feel dizzy right now and I think I am going to faint (false thought) I have never felt this bad before (likely a false thought) then you see the emotion subjective way you are communicating you emotions. Please do not infer from this that subjective communication is bad because I have used it and after subjectively complaining, I realized the emotion word (false thoughts) that I was having. Also once in a while you just want someone to hear how much your suffering a cathartic outburst just get it off your chest so that you can reframe your mind to be aware of the false alarm. Remember that that person is unlikely to understand how much your suffering or even why as I have the same affliction but can never truly know your pain.
Dizzy