MovieChat Forums > The Bridge (2007) Discussion > the girl that was saved?

the girl that was saved?


anyone know what happened to her? is she still alive and doing better?

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Yes, I was disappointed there was no more mention of her, when the filmmakers easily could have followed up on her. OBVIOUSLY the viewers would want to know!


http://brookswashere.ytmnd.com/

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Sadly she comitted suicide three days later by jumping off a helicopter.

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lol.... how harsh it is, is had to laugh at this one.. sorry people :-P

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LMAO

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I'm a nursing student, (in my first year), and I just recently finished my psych-mental health clinical rotation. We just watched "The Bridge" as part of our last day. The woman you are referring to, named Isabelle, was one of my clinical instructor's patients. He said that he recently ran into her and that she was "doing better," and that as far as he knew, she was still alive and receiving treatment :)

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Thanks for the update. Did she ever get in touch with Rich Waters, the photographer who saved her? And has she seen this film?

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She posted to the film's message board on the official website last September, but I don't recall her saying specifically that she has seen the film. She said that it was her in the movie and that she wished she'd gotten a chance to explain.

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She said that it was her in the movie and that she wished she'd gotten a chance to explain.


Did she say what it was she wanted to explain? Or what had brought her out to the bridge? I'm curious as to what her story was.

(I'm afraid my antiquated browser can't seem to get past the Shockwave front page of the official site.)



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She didn't say what brought her to the bridge (multiple times, apparently), but just that she would have liked to explain. The impression I got was that, rather than focusing on methods or on people left behind, it would help to talk more about suicidal ideation. If we talk more about the specific pathology of suicidal thoughts, we might find better ways to help people get out of that mental vortex.

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Thank you for the details. I hope the girl on the bridge -- who is probably a woman by now -- is continuing to get the help she needs and finding alternatives to suicide.

I agree that focusing on suicidal ideation -- what brings people to the bridge -- would help this issue and the people affected by it greatly. That is probably a harder story to tell than this one, but no less important. I have to say I have mixed feelings about this documentary and the filmmakers' tactics, but ultimately anything that sheds light on the hot-button issue of suicide represents progress.

For the poster whose browser wouldn't let him get past the opening page of the film's official Web site, maybe this link will help. If you scroll down, her comments are a couple pages in:
http://www.thebridge-themovie.com/new/index.html

EDIT: I guess the link just takes you back to the main page. I have pasted the girl's comments here, and I removed her name and e-mail address for privacy's sake:

Name:
Email:
Comments: as someone who has attempted suicide more than once(by the way, i'm th woman who gets saved off thledge of the bridge), and as someone who has lost several close friends to suicide, i can only encourage forgiveness, forgivess toward yourself, and toward others, wether you are the person considering suicide, or wether you are a person who has lost someone to suicide, there is so much pain in this world, and so much anger and hate, is it any wonder?we all suffer, and try to make "it" through in our own ways, no one should judge any other for how they "deal", love one another, and help one another, show that you care, not just with words, but with action, and if you can't, may you forgive yourself, as others forgive you as well
Date: 2009-09-21 05:09:47

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The impression I got was that, rather than focusing on methods or on people left behind, it would help to talk more about suicidal ideation.


Perhaps it's just the misdirection of energies?

The greatest path to happiness seems to lie in the renunciation of the self. The catch, of course, is that after you've renounced your self, your ego, you still remain in the world, are a part of it, and continue to make your own contribution to it. The only thing that has actually changed is your own outlook.

What suicide could be is simply people seeking to renounce their selves, but who aren't willing to stick around and still be a part of the ordinary, frustrating, everyday world afterward.

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I'm not really clear on the whole concept of renouncing the self, and I'm not sure the concept would help the suicidal person anyway, who is renouncing his entire being, which extends to the body. More to the point: If a person is suicidal, is he able to think in such abstract terms?

If you are that rare person who is able to separate the self and the body, you are probably suicide-proof, or at least suicide-resistant. But are you happier as a result?

I'm not sure such philosophical discussions would work on a suicidal person, but if it prevents one jumper, it's probably worth a try. Of course, if it results in another jumper, then it's a really bad idea.

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I'm not really clear on the whole concept of renouncing the self, and I'm not sure the concept would help the suicidal person anyway, who is renouncing his entire being, which extends to the body.


When I use the word "self," I'm trying to point to the thing that keeps us separate from the world. Perhaps "ego" is a better word for what it is I'm trying to point to?

For instance, when I perceive a threat, I can feel my shoulders tensing up: that's my body's accustomed way to coping with a threat. However, perhaps a more effective way of dealing with a threat is to relax rather than tense up.

I don't know if you do martial arts or sports, but when you're tense, your body can't move as well: it has to release the tension, first, before you can move. That's why coaches are always yelling at athletes to relax: because they know that a relaxed athlete is a faster one, able to better cope with an incoming ball or puck.

Giving up your ego (or "the thing that is keeping you separate from the world") seems just as important as giving up muscular tension. Without being able to give up the ego, perhaps it's impossible for us to truly enjoy ourselves (and for our souls to move)?


More to the point: If a person is suicidal, is he able to think in such abstract terms?


If you'll pardon my saying so, a suicide may already be thinking in the most abstract terms possible.

I've always been fascinated by drug addicts. Or rather, the mental process that allows people to do things like stick needles in themselves which, let's face it, is hardly a pleasant thing to do under the most ideal circumstances.

It remained a mystery to me how such things could be until it was explained to me by a breathtakingly self-aware former addict that addicts don't view their bodies as part of themselves. That is, their bodies are viewed as "other," an alien thing, even if they don't consciously admit this to themselves. Once you start viewing your body as something "other than you," (or "separate from yourself") it would seem possible to do pretty much anything to it, including sticking needles in it and sending it on trips you know it won't come back from (like off a bridge).


If you are that rare person who is able to separate the self and the body, you are probably suicide-proof, or at least suicide-resistant.


From my own perspective, the rare person is the one who is truly at home in his body, not the one who feels as though his body and "himself" are separate.

If you feel at home in your body, you tend to want to take better care of it. However, as near as I can make out, being at home in your body may not be a widespread trait among people. [shrugs] I this because, as I move through the day, I'm always surprised at how many people (and I include myself here) seem to be ill at ease in their own bodies. That is, they don't take any real pleasure in moving around. Of course, it's impossible to take pleasure in moving around in a body you are not fully at home in.

Maybe it's a bit like driving a rental car vs. driving your own car. As near as I can tell, people tend to be more reckless when driving a rental car than when they are driving their own car because they know that, regardless of what they do to the car, they aren't going to be stuck with it. Once they return the car to the rental company, all the problems associated with that car are also going to go away.

In the case of suicides, they're just taking that rental car (or drug addict) mentality to the extreme. After all, why should I care what's going to happen to my body when I'm viewing it as something "other" than myself?

But are you happier as a result?

I don't know, am I? What happiness means seems to vary quite a bit from person to person.

In my own case, I've come to define it (as of five seconds ago) as a willingness to be connected to the world. That is, the more you are willing to take part in life, the happier you are.

The kicker is that this willingness to take part in life, in the world, is something that has to come from within. I don't know if it's possible to "make" someone be happy, or to what extent one human being can help another to be happy.

(I'm fairly new at this myself.)


I'm not sure such philosophical discussions would work on a suicidal person, but if it prevents one jumper, it's probably worth a try.


Can I be honest here? I think by the time someone has walked out onto the bridge, (or onto a window ledge) it may already be too late. Suicide could be a last-stage symptom of something, not a disease in and of itself as people seem to view it (there's that separateness thing again). This is just a guess on my part.

It reminds me a bit of Walgreens: Walgreens fascinates the hell out of me. Why? All those aisles of bottles and pills are about treating symptoms rather than the underlying causes that bring those symptoms to people. If everyone ate right, got enough sleep, and took care of themselves in general, Walgreens would probably be out of business (or, at least, be a much smaller store).

But people don't do that becuase, let's face it, taking care of yourself is a pain in the ass. Far better, instead, to take those shortcuts (cheat your body of sleep, eat food that is convenient to eat rather than healthy to eat, etc.) and then show up at Walgreens in order to buy that bottle or pill that will correct a problem that could have been avoided.

I think that's why I oppose a suicide barrier on the Golden Gate Bridge: because installing a barrier is ignoring the larger problem. The problem: how do people get to the point where jumping off a bridge seems like to best alternative possible?

Installing a barrier is no different than popping a pill: once you've installed a barrier, (or popped a pill) you can pretend the problem has gone away. It's solely a feel-good measure that doesn't address the underlying problem.

To be clear: I can certainly understand why people agitate for a barrier. We are a feel-good society that is always looking for ways to feel good. However, I'm becoming convinced in my old age that there are ways that help us to feel good, to take part in the world, on an ongoing basis as opposed to the temporary, just-pop-a-pill way that we've come to accept as normal.

Whether those non-temporary, meaningful ways of taking part in the world can be transmitted from person to person is something I just don't know. Can one person help another to be happy? Or are they only able to point that other person to something that other person already has inside them all along?

I don't have an answer.


Of course, if it results in another jumper, then it's a really bad idea.


Is suicide always a bad idea?

The way I view it is that people actively contemplating suicide and I have a lot in common: we're both trying to approach the problem of how to attain happiness. In their case, they're seeking to attain it by killing themselves and, by doing so, forfeiting their ego, that feeling of separateness they can't shake, a feeling that has overwhelmed them. Killing themselves is the only way they know of to be rid of that feeling.

In my own case, I, too, am seeking to forfeit my ego, that thing that keeps me separate from the world. The only difference between myself and a suicide is that I want to stick around afterwards and be a part of the world.

We're not so different; there's a connection there. Perhaps the only difference between someone who steps out onto the Golden Gate Bridge merely to take in the awe-inspiring view versus someone who steps out onto the bridge with the avowed purpose of ending their lives is that the connection to life is there in one and absent in the other.

How to bring that connection to everyone? I don't know. As I said before, I'm fairly new at this myself.






































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That is exactly why many drunk drivers often survive their crashes when their victims do not. A sober driver, who sees they are about to have an accident, will tense up all their muscles and that is what causes most of their injuries when they crash. A drunk's muscles and body will be completely relaxed and they simply "go with the flow".

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The scene when she gets saved, and the fact the guy took a couple of pictures of her on the way over the side. It's very disturbing.

It really sucks there are 30 thousand that do kill themselves in the USA each year, and according to guessing an average based on WHO's site, 300 thousand people worldwide each year.

It's absolutely terrible and needs to be one of the priorities of all the worlds governments.

The solution I think should be to make a society so all can have what they want in life, I think it's possible. The same solution for hunger, misery, loneliness, sickness and accidents. It can be done.

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The one that didn't speak English? I wondered who she was, did she come from another country and was all alone and decided to kill herself....

If you don't believe in Jesus Christ and are 100% proud of it, put this in your sig.

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Her name is Isabel and she is still alive, still living in the Bay Area, and doing only slightly better. She was born and raised in Belgium, and came to the U.S. in 1996. She has no family here and very few friends. She has a daughter who is going on 7 years old now, who was conceived around the time of the incident that was captured in the film. She has stated that her daughter is her primary will to live now, and I get the sense that she is still a very lonely and rather lost soul.

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[deleted]

LOL, the deaths are staged. Do you think they would really show that? They'd be off to jail in no time!

"Those whom do not know their horror cinema are bound to be victims of horror in life" -AgentJ9

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One of the things I'm curious about is how are they able to pay for their treatments or hospitalization? Where I live I don't think you can get free treatments. I've known people in mental hospitals and receiving treatment but they were getting Medicaid that pays for it. You usually have to be 'disabled' for at least a year to get Medicaid, though, and in some states it's two years. I tried to get it before and I was told it would take a year to qualify and I would have to see doctors to prove it. I can't afford to see doctors.

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