What in the world are you talking about? "Desperate wishes?" It's called criticism. It's the main purpose this discussion forum even exists -- so that we can express our opinions, questions, and criticisms of what we see on TV shows and movies. I'm hardly the only TrekBBS member who has ever voiced a negative opinion about something from a TV episode or suggested a way it could've been done better. I'm certainly not the first person in this thread to have complained that something in a Heroes Reborn episode was implausible or badly done.
You
know we love criticisms & differing opinions...but you're doubling down and really dismissing the rest of us who have given some pretty good reasons why we could be right. I think it'd be fair to say most of understand & even appreciate your point. We'd probably love a work which features your solution to what you feel is an ongoing sci-fi trope problem. But int his particular case, it's not a big deal. See below for an explanation.
You don't need evidence for something that's simple common sense. I've tried to explain this. Getting a bullet fired into a part of your body does much less damage than having that part of your body completely disintegrated. Yes? Doesn't that logically follow? So it stands to reason that if you have the power to restore your body from being completely disintegrated, then it should be easy to restore your body from being only slightly damaged. It's as simple as concluding that 100-2 is a larger number than 100-100. Even if it isn't portrayed that way in fiction, it should be, because it simply makes sense. My problem with a lot of shapeshifter portrayals in fiction, not just this one, is that they fail to recognize the contradiction of a shapeshifter being unable to heal an injury.
The thing is -- there a couple of things you're not thinking about.
1) The body disintegrating is reassembling itself
exactly how it was before the turning into mist. Also HE is choosing to break apart. Apparently, his "mental force" is the "glue" to keep it from spreading apart.
2) This particular power is the kind that needs active mental use (not reactive like healing). It might have first been discovered as instinctive (i.e. he saw something, and then made him turn into the mist). As I thought I mentioned earlier..when I had sever acid reflux, I could absolutely not move. I couldn't even walk, let alone do something that needed concentration, like driving. Not just turning to mist, but doing so with the intention of returning your body to how it was
before you were shot, would not necessarily be high on your mind. The intense pain of
being shot in chest would be just a tad distracting, no?
3) The priest seems to have been pretty much alone in developing his power. If he had Micah, or Cisco (from Flash) or yourself as a friend/partner/advisor.. then sure, he would
not have had an excuse to not somehow try something dangerous like that. (i.e. what if he rearranges himself wrong? He could hurt himself by rearranging things the wrong way. How does one make sure that EVERY ONE of your tiny cells get rearranged in the right spot.
4) Ask the average non sci-fi geek --if you had this power, would you even THINK about it being a healing power? And if so, would you even
consider doing a Clair Bennet, and do something painful and potentially lethal to see if you could heal yourself? Would the priest, presumably a man of peace, have reason to try it out? Being Catholic, he might take the suicide ban to an extra level, where self-harm is also out of the question (for him).
Also, in regards to shapeshifters...it would depend on what kind of shapeshifting. Are they Odo type of shape shifters? Or just changing the outside... like the one on the Flash. It seems like he could only change the OUTSIDE. His brain, and most innards, stayed the same. So certainly if he were shot, he might not be able to fix himself. In the Flash's enemy's case, he couldn't even restore the face he had for most of his life -- I doubt he could restore the insides.
Even if it was Odo-type... you seem to be assuming that if some cells are seriously damaged, that the rest of the cells won't feel it. If the cells can rearrange everything through some nervous system, would it not also share the pain with the whole body as well?
So.... do I not have some valid points here?