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Self-Mutilation Demonstration: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
[[File:SelfMutilationDemonstration_1663.png|link=Heroes (TV series)|frame|Really, Claire, at the dinner table?!]]
 
{{quote|"'Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone.' ''Wheat, eh? There's enough of it, we can afford to waste as much as we want. Like my head, you see!''"|'''Albedo''', ''[[Xenosaga (Video Game)|Xenosaga]]''.}}
 
[[Immortality]] isn't exactly a superpower you can easily prove to the skeptic. Sure, you can ''say'' that you're [[Really Seven Hundred Years Old]], but whose to say that they'll believe you? And, while you may have that [[Healing Factor]], you [[Good Thing You Can Heal|need to be injured for that to work]]. It's not like you can have your arm sliced open on demand just to prove that you-
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* This was a [[Once an Episode]] trick for Yuta in ''[[Mermaid Saga]]''. It even got so common that his girlfriend eventually started predicting when the "I'm [[Really Seven Hundred Years Old|really five hundred years old]]..." speech was about to occur and started inconspicuously searching for the nearest pointy object to use.
* Happens occasionally in the ''[[Baccano (Light Novel)|Baccano!]]'' series.
* Greed proves he has the [[Healing Factor]] in ''[[Fullmetal Alchemist]]'' by asking a flunky to smash his head in with a giant, pointy mallet.
* ''[[Phoenix]]'' - Masato does this after Phoenix the grants him immortality, first slicing his skin open with a knife, then shooting himself.
* In ''[[D .Gray Man-man]]'', there's a scene where Road Kamelot tears her own face off using Allen's anti-Akuma weapon so she can show off her [[Healing Factor]].
* In the [[Cool Boat|Queen]] [[Nasty Party|Camillia]] arc of ''[[Descendants of Darkness]],'' Hisoka stabs himself in the hand to prove to Tsubaki that he is indeed a [[Shinigami]], and to try to get her to believe him when he says that [[Deadly Doctor|Muraki]] is ''not'' [[Light Is Not Good|the angelic hero]] [[Rape Asas Backstory|she thinks he is.]]
* Ciel does this in differing ways between the manga and the visual novel of ''[[Tsukihime]]''. In the manga she stabs herself through her eye to the squicking of Akiha, and in the VN she slits her own throat to the amazement of Shiki.
* Kira Sakuya from ''[[Angel Sanctuary]]'' repeatedly injures his arm to prove to his {{spoiler|host body's}} father that he is actually {{spoiler|a soul that has taken over his real son's dying body}}.
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* ''[[Jennifer's Body]]''. Jennifer burns her own tongue with a cigarette lighter, and slashes herself in front of Needy when she decides to share her 'secret' with her.
* ''[[Terminator 2]]'' has John Connor order the T-800 to show Dyson he really is a robot. The T-800 peels off the skin and muscle of his arm, only to look at the exposed endoskeleton dispassionately.
* In ''[[Men in Black (Filmfilm)|Men in Black]]'', [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mndsvjYhr6Q K shoots Jeebs] in the face mostly to unveil [[The Masquerade]] to J.
{{quote| '''Jeebs''': You insensitive prick! Do you have any idea how much that ''stings''?}}
* In the original ''[[Highlander (Film)|Highlander]]'' film, when Connor MacLeod decides to reveal his secret to the love interest, he clears up any lingering doubts about his immortality by stabbing himself in the chest with a dagger.
* In ''The Medallion'', Jackie Chan's character is made immortal by the eponymous artifact, and tries to prove this to his partner by asking said partner to first shoot (the partner refuses, saying there'd be a ton of paperwork if he discharged his weapon) and then stab him. After he refuses to do ''that'', Jackie stabs himself. On seeing he's unharmed, the partner then takes the knife and ''keeps stabbing him'' in awe of the regeneration.
* Freddy Krueger arguably does this a few times in the ''[[A Nightmare Onon Elm Street]]'' series, mostly just to horrify his victims. In the first film, for example, he says "Watch this!" before cutting his own fingers off, causing a strange green liquid to squirt from them.
* In the first ''[[Wishmaster (Film)|Wishmaster]]'' movie the Djinn blows his brains out at the heroine's command, thereby demonstrating two things: he must do whatever she says, and he is not to be gotten rid of that easily. He does concede that it hurt like hell.
 
 
== Literature ==
 
* It's not done to show immortality, so it might not count, but in one ''[[Animorphs (Literature)|Animorphs]]'', a recently freed Hork-Bajir is suspected of being controlled by a Yeerk (parasitic alien brain-living slug). His response is to ram his arm blades into his skull and [[Crazy Awesome|pull his head apart]] to show his own Yeerk-free brain. Tobias, the narrator of that particular book, points out "it's not like it didn't hurt him, either. I could see the pain on his face." He has a [[Healing Factor]], but it doesn't make it any less awesome.
* In the ''[[Women of the Otherworld]]'' novel ''Stolen'', Cassandra is trying to convince Elena that vampires are real, despite standing in broad daylight and wearing perfect makeup -- which she would have needed a reflection to apply. So she takes a ballpoint pen and stabs her own hand. The wound doesn't bleed and heals almost instantly.
* In ''[[Interview With a Vampire]]'' Louis remembers when learning about his new attributes, he jammed a dagger in his arm, and before he could pulll it out, the body had healed itself around the dagger.
* In the Popol Vuh (Maya mythology) the hero twins use this power to defeat the evil Lords of Xibalba. Xbalanque cut Hunahpu apart and offered him as a sacrifice, and Hunapu rose from the dead. The Lords demanded that the Hero Twins try it on them. The twins did half of the trick...
* In ''[[Tuck Everlasting]]'' Tuck, after realizing he's immortal, to test it out he ''shoots himself through the heart''. It passes right through him like water.
* In ''[[Discworld (Literature)/Thief of Time|Thief of Time]]'', a yeti invites Lobsang and Lu-Tze to chop off his head in order to demonstrate the yetis' [[Save Scumming]] abilities.
 
== Live Action TV ==
 
* ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]''
** Claire in has been known to do this quite a few times. To prove to herself that she really can heal, Claire cuts off her own toe and watches her foot grow a new one to replace it. It was more to test how well she can heal, not that that makes it any less crazy.
** Adam, upon finding out about his [[Healing Factor]], starts to mutilate himself just to watch his body heal within seconds.
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* An episode of ''[[Highlander the Series]]'' had Duncan doing this to an Immortal that had lost his memory. In another episode it's shown in flashback how he convinced Tessa of his imortality. {{spoiler|He shot himself}}
** Methos does it in another episode, cutting open his palm to demonstrate his immortality to a Watcher he knew.
* In ''[[Blood Ties (TV)|Blood Ties]]'', Henry demonstrates his vampiric nature to Vicki by shoving a knife through his hand.
* Daisy did this once in an episode of ''[[Dead Like Me]]''.
* Inverted in ''[[First Wave (TV)|First Wave]]'', when Foster is captured by people claiming to be government agents who know the truth about the Gua. To prove he is really human, the agent in charge let's Foster stab him in the hand, as aliens have a [[Healing Factor]]. The hand doesn't heal, convincing foster. Later, it is revealed that all this was an elaborate alien ploy. In fact, it was difficult for them to create an arm that ''wouldn't'' heal.
* In the remake of ''[[V]]'', members of [[La Résistance]] cut their skin to show that there's nothing reptilian underneath.
* In ''[[The Gates]]'', a werewolf slices his arm to reassure his succubus girlfriend that she doesn't need to worry about accidentally hurting him.
* In ''[[Eureka]]'', recently-fired scientist Carl Carlson sticks a knife through his hand to prove to his old boss that he has, in fact, finally created a process for [[Healing Factor|spontaneous cellular regeneration]].
* ''[[The Collector (TV series)|The Collector]]'': One of the Devil's [[Deal Withwith the Devil|clients]] doesn't remember or believe that she made a deal when the deadline approaches, so Morgan convinced her by cutting himself, showing his [[Incendiary Exponent|hellfire-powered]] healing.
* Subverted in ''[[The 4400]]'', when Kevin Burkhoff stabs himself in the hand (which heals) to prove that he has created a [[Super Serum|serum that can give people abilities]].
{{quote| '''Diana:''' ''(astonished)'' You've successfully manifested a 4400 ability.<br />
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== Video Games ==
 
* The Nameless One in ''[[Planescape Torment|Planescape: Torment]]'' does this rather often. You can even do it to convince someone not to commit suicide. Or you can have him break his neck just to scare people.
* Albedo from ''[[Xenosaga (Video Game)|Xenosaga]]'' on at least two occasions shows off his immortality through self-decapitation.
* A variation of this trope is used in ''[[Ever 17]]''. {{spoiler|In the Jellyfish Gondola, Tsugumi shows that she has a disease that makes her immortal by killing her pet hamster Chami, which is also infected by the disease. After seeing Chami's shocking sudden death, Takeshi sees an even more shocking sight as the hamster just regenerates so quickly that it looks like he never died after only a minute.}}
 
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