Funny thing that. You're not seeing the stars, you're seeing their afterimages. In order to grab one you'd need to lead the target by quite a bit, as well as correct for atmospheric refraction. That's all assuming that the act of "grasping" is instantaneous and without relativistic effects, or you'll have to account for those too.
Even if you successfully do all that. You wouldn't be able to perceive the effect until the light reaches you, or rather, stops reaching you. Something that will take years even if you blew up the 2nd closest one. In order to take the picture above Flan would've had to destroy the star in question anywhere between decades and centuries ago.
A demonstration of just how absurdly, impossibly, mind-bogglingly far apart everything in space is. It's quite a feat that we're able to measure it at all.
Edit: Ah it's a meteorite she blew up. Thought i was looking at a supernova.