Nation & World News Recent study focuses on emotions of heartbreak Michael Bridges' recent study at Temple University aims to understanding the effects of a broken heart By Stacey Burling Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) PHILADELPI1IA — What does for giveness look like? Maybe it looks like Elizabeth as she envisions her heart four years after her husband's affair with one of her friends ended their 12-year marriage. At first she sees it raw, red and bruised, but then the 42-year-old dancer smiles in wonder as her mental pic ture mutates. light pours from her heart. She sees it bursting with love and joy. Her smile fades. She leans forward in her chair sobbing, mostly from happiness at the beauty of it, but with a twinge of sadness that so much love is going to waste. Maybe forgiveness looks like the jagged graph of Elizabeth's heartbeat recorded by monitors on her wrist and rib cage as she talks with her ther apist that day. For most of their hour together, her heart beats between 55 and 65 times per minute. But at 1:57 p.m., as she cries, it shoots like a geyser to 129 beats per minute. Then, just as quickly, it falls as she settles into post-tears peace. All of it — plus her words, of course — offers clues for Elizabeth's thera pist, Michael Bridges, a psychologist and researcher at Temple University who is trying to figure out what helps people let go of the pain of betrayal and rotten relationships. He's heading a study of the heartbroken, people who can't get past their anger at their parents or ex lovers, people so hurt they're afraid to love again. This kind of pain is what Bridges called a "ubiquitous human phenomenon" and it's one of the pri mary reasons people seek therapy. In his study, up to 60 patients will receive therapy for 10 to 12 weeks. Each session will be videotaped, and researchers will later dissect the tapes for facial expressions and other physi cal signs of emotions. They'll listen to the words: Is a woman angrily listing the bad things her former boyfriend did or crying about the way his caddishness made her feel? Clients will answer written surveys before and after each session. Bridges' team will correlate those details with heart rates to get another measure of emotional intensity. Some people, Bridges said, may not be showing much emotion, while their hearts are going wild. Me has already noticed something interesting in one of his patients. During one session, she began to tear up as she discussed her failed re lationship. But rather than allow her self to cry, she veered off on an angry tangent. Her heartbeat jumped 30 beats per minute and stayed elevated for 10 minutes. When something similar happened in a later session, she cried instead. Again her heart rate spiked, but it came down almost immediately. All these data will reveal "the natu ral history of therapy," said Bridges, who directs Temple's Psychological Services Center. His ambitious goal is "to think in much more detail about what lands and intensity of emotions really lead to change in therapy." Ultimately, he'd like to go a step further and measure the heart rates of therapists as well, to help figure out what type of therapist/client relation ship is most effective. John Norcross, a University of Scranton psychology professor who has studied the effectiveness of differ ent styles of therapy, said the idea that mind and body are connected is an cient. 'The notion that there's a recip rocal reaction between the mind and body is as old as Aristotle," he said. But Bridges' work fits within two newer trends as well. There has been explosive growth recently in studying the interactions between psychology, neurology and the immune system, Norcross said. There is also a trend to ward studying smaller elements of therapy to ferret out which specific as pects work. While he has been through a divorce, the now happily married Bridges said it was not his own love life that spurred his interest in heartbreak and emotions. It was watching his patients fail to get better after therapy. Bridges noticed that patients could have lots of insights of the "I can't-stand-up-to-my-wife-because she-reminds-me-of-Mommy" vari ety, but nothing would change. That led to his interest in emotion-fo cused therapy, a style of treatment pioneered by Leslie Greenberg, a psychology professor at York Univer sity in Toronto. Greenberg contends that emotions get short shrift in the more popular cognitive behavioral therapy, which aims to change the way troubled people think about their world. Bridges now believes, like Green berg, that emotions can be helpful in therapy and that a "certain intensity of feeling" is necessary for people to change. Some people seek treatment be cause they're feeling too much, Bridges said. A depressed client may be flooded with emotions, crying un controllably. That person needs a dif ferent kind of care than a depressed client who has little energy and seems to be cut off from emotions, or an anxious client who frets constantly. Often, he said, anxious patients "think way, way too much" as a dis traction from threatening feelings. Overthinkers, Bridges said, benefit from therapy that helps them experi ence their feelings — physically and emotionally — while the overfeelers need to calm down enough to think more clearly. This is a far cry from the old primal scream idea. That doesn't work, Bridges said. Sometimes, anger is a helpful emotion, he said, but patients who are stuck in their anger often need to work on feeling something else. While the researchers sometimes call this study the "forgiveness proj ect," Bridges said that's an oversimpli fication. "We don't have an agenda that forgiveness is the only way to re solve this," he said. In the case of abuse, for instance, patients may not forgive, but they can let go, Bridges said. He uses the empty-chair technique: Patients are told to imagine their transgressor in a chair across the room and talk to him. When they're getting better, Bridges said, patients will say, "I'm not going to let you take up any more of my life. ... You've been in my mind too long, so I'm going to cast you out." Elizabeth, who asked that her last name not be published, read about the study in a Temple newspaper and felt as if someone had read her mind. Even after four years, including therapy immediately after the breakup, she felt stuck in the past, afraid to choose another man after she had so thoroughly misjudged the last one. "I got into some cycles of blaming myself and not trusting my judgment in men and still feeling like a victim," she said. She found it relatively easy to forget the heart-rate monitors during her sessions with Bridges, though it did make her a little nervous to realize someone would be analyzing her fa cial expressions on the videotape. Af ter six sessions, she was already feel ing much better. The therapy helped her not only re member the good times in her mar riage but realize that she, like her hus band, had been unhappy. "I think 1 really didn't want it to last either," she says now. Before the therapy, she found her self thinking of her ex in a sad, painful way three or four times a week. That has changed. "I'm not thinking about him," she said. "If I do, it's almost like thinking about a movie I saw a couple years ago. It's not charged the way it was." (c) 2004, The Philadelphia Inquirer. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Jurisdiction questions cloud civilian prison abuse cases uases or abuse committed by civilians have yet to be referred to the FBI, says Director Robert Mueller By Shannon McCaffrey Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) WASHINGTON — Although sev eral cases of prisoner abuse by civil ians in Iraq have been referred to the Justice Department for possible criminal prosecution, the FBI has not yet been asked to investigate any of them, Director Robert Mueller said Thursday. Mueller’s comments before the Senate Judiciary Committee seemed to indicate that the probe into whether independent contractors or CIA officers killed prisoners in Iraq and Afghanistan is moving more slowly than on the military front, where one soldier has already been court-martialed and others have been charged. While the faces of military police have been splashed all over the news, the names of almost all civil ians involved — employees of other government agencies and civilian contractors — were deleted from Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba's report on the abuse at Abu Ghraib. Mueller said he believed that the FBI, which has agents in Iraq, is "the Premier Travel 1011 Harlow 1747-0909^^ [Student Travel Experts appropriate investigating body" when cases are referred to the Justice De partment. But he said lawyers there had not passed any cases their way. "My understanding is the investi gations have been conducted to date by the (CIA) inspector general’s of fice, ” Mueller said. Mueller, a former U S. Marine and federal prosecutor, also said lawyers for the Justice Department and De fense Department are wrestling with jurisdictional issues. Any crimes at the prison would have been com mitted on foreign soil against for eign citizens, creating complicated legal questions. The CIA inspector general is investi gating three prisoner deaths — two in Iraq and one in Afghanistan — and whether there was any CIA involve ment in the prisoner abuse depicted in photos taken at Abu Ghraib. Among the cases that have been re ferred to the Justice Department is an Iraqi who died at the Abu Ghraib prison while under CIA interrogation. His bruised corpse, packed in ice, was photographed. Nearby were two American soldiers — Spc. Charles Graner and Spc. Sabrina Harman — posing with thumbs up. Both have al ready been charged in the prison abuse scandal at Abu Ghraib. Also Thursday, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., called for a Justice Department probe into two mem bers of a U.S. group sent in May Anniversary Sale . The best adventures begin with a really big sale.' Friday, May 21 — Monday, May 31 Visit rei.com for info on free clinics, local outdoor events, and co-op membership. 306 Lawrence St., Eugene -4— WWW.REI.COM 2003 to Iraq to help with the recon struction of Abu Ghraib. Lane Mc Cotter, a former corrections chief in Utah, and John Armstrong, who led the prison system in Connecticut, were part of a team picked by Attor ney General John Ashcroft and oth ers in the Bush administration. McCotter resigned from the top spot in Utah when a schizophrenic in mate died after being strapped naked to a chair for 16 hours. McCotter went on to serve as head of a private prison system now under investigation for denying prisoners access to medical treatment, Schumer said. Armstrong shipped a variety of Connecticut inmates, even low-level offenders, to a super-max prison in Virginia known for its use of excessive force. Schumer said that when Armstrong resigned he was facing allegations that he sexually harassed female subordinates. "Why would we send officials with such disturbing records to han dle such a sensitive mission? That's beyond me. It cries out for an expla nation," Schumer said. Neither McCotter nor Armstrong could be reached for comment. But in a statement sent to the Santa Fe New Mexican newspaper earlier this week, McCotter condemned the abuses in Iraq and said he had noth ing to do with training guards there. (cj 2004, Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Summer Term 2004 Leadership Experience UO Summer Internships Undergraduate Course Credit mmmrnmmmmmimmmmmmmmmmmmm j For More Information: stop by the Career Center, the Internship Office in 270 Ed, or call Carla at 346-1592