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In The Force Awakens, Kylo Ren is shot in the side by Chewbacca. Later on in the forest, we see him hit himself repeatedly in the area where he was shot.

Kylo Ren repeatedly hitting himself on his left side as he walks

Why does he do this?
Wouldn't that, like... really hurt?

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    I assumed it was some kind of Dark-Side healing process.
    – Rogue Jedi
    Dec 20, 2015 at 2:29
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    Seriously, what am I missing? Why is saying that a character keeps hitting a side of his body a spoiler?
    – Andres F.
    Dec 20, 2015 at 6:41
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    @AndresF. I guess to most people a spoiler is something big and crucial that would be ruined if you knew it beforehand. To me, if someone who hasn't seen the movie doesn't know it, it's a spoiler! lol. :)
    – RedCaio
    Dec 20, 2015 at 7:30
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    @AndresF. well then when I go see the movie, for the first 100 minutes Kylo Ren isn’t hitting the side of his body, my brain starts saying “Well, something must happen to make him start hitting the side of his body”, and I’m trying to figure out what that is instead of experiencing the movie fresh. Dec 20, 2015 at 12:45
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    @Cherubel Stim packs are actually found in a number of different games - the "Stim" is short for "stimulant," since including a stimulant is the handwavium explanation for why they can get you back to full operational effectiveness despite being injured. They're generally the science fiction equivalent of "health potions," since "health potions" can sound embarrassingly un-science-fiction-y.
    – user867
    Dec 22, 2015 at 3:02

5 Answers 5

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I think there's a much simpler answer.

Hitting a part of your body that is causing a distractingly sharp, acute pain can numb that pain by turning it into a blunt, dull, persistent and therefore less distracting pain. Basically flattening the pain by maxing it out.

This is something I've done in real life when sharp (non-wound...) pains like cramp or muscle strain momentarily prevent me from doing important things. I wouldn't recommend it... But it feels like it helps at the time, for a few seconds at least. I'm sure I've seen lightly-injured sports players do it, too. I'm trying to find a reference to link to, but all I can find are disturbing self-harm advice pages which I don't want to link to... But it is a thing.

It's also a (self-defeating) way to vent anger and frustration. Kylo does this at times his opponent is too far to lash out at.

Of course, this is not a sensible thing to do, because it makes the actual wound worse, and the numb feeling wears off in seconds - but we shouldn't expect Kylo to be behaving sensibly at this point.

It's been well established that he doesn't cope well with anger, and at this point he's even more of an emotional mess than ever - not just for the obvious reasons, but also because his prime motivation seems to be a fear of failure/mediocrity and at this moment, not only is the plan is on the cusp of failing, but also, with his injuries and his inability to focus, he's struggling to defeat two people he should defeat easily.

The pain from his wound is distracting him and compromising his ability to beat two enemies he should defeat easily - and he's lashing out in characteristic fashion, trying to literally beat the pain away.

Not sensible, but perfectly in-character.


From a storytelling point of view: - it reminds the viewers that he's injured from Chewie's shot, is struggling to focus, and is not at all at his best, and could pre-emptively answer the question "Why is such a powerful character struggling to defeat two characters who have little to no experience with lightsabers?". The clips where he beats his wound also include other similar reminders such as, visible blood on the snow, him hunched over momentarily limping, him roaring in frustration, etc.

Judging from how this scene is discussed, I suspect it maybe didn't succeed in communicating this to all viewers...

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    Although he didn't succeed, it was totally badass. Really emphasized how out of control he is.
    – Mdev
    Dec 21, 2015 at 18:48
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    Sounds like Percussive Mantenance
    – Möoz
    Dec 21, 2015 at 23:05
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    So, basically, Kylo Ren's a fruitcake.
    – Omegacron
    Jan 13, 2016 at 19:00
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    @Omegacron I believe the film's working title was "Star Wars VII: Basically, Kylo Ren's A Fruitcake" Jan 13, 2016 at 21:56
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    I guess perhaps not a lot of athletes hang out here? Not only are the first few paragraphs quite true, but also if a muscle seizes up or starts spasming (eg: with Charlie Horse) smacking it a bit can sometimes help it to unclench and start obeying orders properly (and its already in pain, so the pain from hitting it isn't a big deal). A more effective treatment is a massage, but there isn't exactly time for that while the action is still ongoing. This is what I assumed was going on. Presumably the misbehaving body part had something to do with the damage from the earlier bowcaster bolt.
    – T.E.D.
    Jan 16, 2016 at 3:28
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According to Wookieepedia:

Kylo could be seen beating his wound to utilize his pain and tap into the dark side of the force.

Rather than his perpetual state of pain handicapping him, it fuelled his rage, allowing him advanced control of the Dark Side of the Force. The same used to be true of Darth Vader back in the day. It's a special case of Force Rage:

Force Rage, also known as Dark Rage, Force Enrage, or Force Fury, was a dark side alter Force ability. The Force user would tap into his or her innermost fears, pain and hate, and convert them into an intense rage. The user could then channel the anger to increase his or her own speed, strength, and ferocity. However, the body could not handle such rage for long periods of time, so the user became greatly weakened for some time after the rage subsided. If light side users wielded Force Rage, it could permanently disrupt their connection to the light side unless something happened to interrupt the Rage and bring them out of the dark side's grip. Therefore, the Rage could give the wielder an instantaneous physical and mental response, but pull them into deep depression, physiological harm, and the endless void of the dark side.

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    Does Wookiepedia have citations for that or that a usual Wikia case of making up narrative? Dec 20, 2015 at 2:44
  • hmmm, that first page only cites the movie, so it looks like someone was interpreting what they saw and guessing at Ren's motives there. Still, a good answer and you have my upvote. I look forward to any additionally confirmation, like a novelization or script, though :)
    – RedCaio
    Dec 20, 2015 at 2:45
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    @randal'thor - let me check. The only thing that expresses how I feel about Wookiepedia is AWRGRRRRRRRR! Dec 20, 2015 at 2:48
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    Like a pirate? I thought that was a Chewbacca impersonation!
    – Rand al'Thor
    Dec 20, 2015 at 2:50
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    @randal'thor - you read my mind like Kilo Ren (though, considering his success rate, I'm not sure that came out as a compliment any more than Luna Lovegood telling Harry "You're as sane as I am") Dec 20, 2015 at 2:52
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I think he is hitting himself like a scare-tactic, to make them fear that he feels no pain. His lightsaber can also be a scare-tactic, because it has no practical use.

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    We prefer not to have speculation. If you can add a source, please do.
    – Mithical
    Dec 21, 2015 at 22:25
  • @Mithrandir First of all, answers with sources are greatly encouraged, but not a strict requirement here on SciFi Exchange (some of the other StackExchange sites are a different story.) Second of all, you might as well add that comment to every answer here, because all of it is speculation as no canon answer exists at this time. The problem here is with the entire thread, as it is a question that is only capable of soliciting opinion-based answers.
    – arkon
    Mar 25, 2016 at 4:54
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He's hitting himself to get himself angry and riled up. Yo get the adrenaline pumping. That's like some really dark side stuff right there – using pain to get angry and turn that anger into adrenaline.

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Kylo Ren is hitting himself in the side as a metaphor, in a way. He is distracting the pain he now has internally by causing greater outside pain himself. We can see that reflected in the idea that Ren has suffered a great emotional pain, and is now using the dark side of the force to create a greater outer pain socially in the world than the pain he feels inside to make his own feel more bearable.

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  • Isn't this basically the same as the bottom answer...?
    – Mithical
    Dec 22, 2015 at 6:28

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