Let $\pi: E \to D$ be an exact Lefschetz fibration with corners (fibers with boundary)over the disk. Fix a point $\theta \in \partial D$ and consider the fiber $F_\theta = \pi^{-1}(\theta)$ over that point. Then the vanishing cycles in $F_\theta$ are exact Lagrangian spheres. By vanishing cycle we mean a sphere embedded in the fiber that degenerates to a point along a path that joins $\theta$ with a critical point of $\pi$.
As pointed out by Paul Seidel in his book, the fact that vanishing cycles are exact Lagrangian spheres is trivial except when $\dim E = 4$ (see 16b, page 221 of "Fukaya categories and Picard-Lefschetz theory"). A bit later in that same chapter is pointed out that any exact Lagrangian sphere in an exact Symplectic manifold $F$ appears as the vanishing cycle in some Lefschetz fibration that has $F$ as one of its fibers.
Now my question: assume $\dim E = 4$ (I'm not sure if this is relevant but maybe it simplifies it in terms of the framings of the Lagrangian spheres). Assume also that we fix the Lefschetz fibration $\pi: E \to D$. Suppose that the set of vanishing cycles generates the homology $H_1(F_\theta)$. Let $V \subset F_\theta$ be an exact Lagrangian sphere (in this case, a simple closed curve).
Is $V$ a vanishing cycle? That is, does necessarily exist a path in $D$ joining $\theta$ with some critical point that has $V$ as its vanishing cycle?