@Jasmine Yow similar to what else has been discussed... I would suggest that safety is always psychological. We experience safety as a state, yet to experience that states means that we have to create the skill and capacity to know that we can be safe. For example... one who has high level training in martial arts with a strong body will feel inherently safer walking the streets than someone with a weak body and no training. The experience is based upon the competence that is developed. As an entrepreneur... one who has a higher order set of skills and experiences to draw on will be able to feel safer in more degrees of risk and uncertainty than one who hasn't. We see many very successful entrepreneurs who have gone from millions to millions in debt and back up to millions again with more ease than others of us can make our first 100k. The reason why safety is so significant is because of the tethering to the nervous system and what happens internally when we feel unsafe. Basically our internal alarm system switches on, and we go into survival responses which left on too long create degeneration psychologically and physiologically. We live in a complex world where immediate and immanent survival (like a bear chasing us) is conflated with perceived survival (like getting down to our last few hundred dollars or a fight with our partner). When we are in survival response our attention narrows, we lose peripheral vision both literally and metaphorically, our pre-frontal cortex shuts down by degrees, our creative, critical and problem solving thinking diminishes and we become increasingly catastrophic as our mind focuses in on worst-case scenarios. If we are going to have evolving businesses, evolving relationships, evolving communities, evolving impact... then we need to know how to train safety as a state of being. It's almost impossible to run a business or have a beautiful relationship when we are pushed into panic all the time by our brain perceiving everything as a survival threat.