Showing posts with label Buddhism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buddhism. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Chapter one - Bodhichitta in Motion: The Lotus in the Fire


Bodhichitta in Motion: The Lotus in the Fire

After understanding the Inner Palace Gates of the subtle body, the practitioner must eventually step beyond inward refinement and allow realization to meet the living world. Vajrayana does not regard the inner and outer as two separate domains. The same awareness that recognizes mind’s nature in meditation is the awareness that speaks, listens, decides, and responds in daily life.

At this stage, Bodhichitta is no longer only an intention or aspiration. It becomes movement. It becomes presence. It becomes the way one stands in the midst of complexity without abandoning clarity or compassion.

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Bodhichitta in Motion

Bodhichitta in motion arises naturally when inner fixation loosens. As grasping at self softens, responsiveness to others becomes less forced and less self-conscious. Action no longer needs to announce itself as virtuous; it simply responds where response is needed.

This is not the result of emotional idealism, nor of moral striving. It is the quiet consequence of mind training. When the inner landscape is less crowded by reactivity, space opens for discernment. Compassion then flows not as obligation, but as suitability — appropriate to conditions, time, and place. 

In this way, outer conduct becomes an extension of inner practice. Speech, silence, engagement, and restraint all arise from the same source of awareness cultivated on the cushion.

The Lotus in the Fire

Vajrayana often uses the image of the lotus in fire to describe engagement with the world. The lotus grows in mud, yet remains unstained. The fire burns fiercely, yet does not consume the lotus. This image does not suggest detachment or numbness. The heat is felt. The conditions are real.

To be a lotus in the fire is to remain present without hardening, and compassionate without being consumed. Anger, desire, sorrow, and confusion may still arise, but they no longer dominate perception or dictate response. Awareness recognizes them without immediately turning them into action.


This is not achieved by suppression, but by familiarity with mind itself. When the nature of experience is recognized, emotions are allowed to move and dissolve without being grasped as identity.

Contemplation in Action

For the Vajrayana practitioner, contemplation does not end when meditation concludes. The same clarity cultivated in stillness is gently carried into movement, conversation, and decision-making. Each encounter becomes an opportunity to recognize habitual patterns and soften them through awareness.


When difficulty arises, the question is no longer “How do I maintain a spiritual state?” but rather “How do I remain awake here?” This shift prevents practice from becoming fragile or dependent on ideal conditions.

In this way, the world itself becomes a field of contemplation. Success and failure, praise and blame, ease and exhaustion all reveal remaining attachments and invite deeper integration.

Hidden Tests of the Path

As practice matures, the most subtle tests do not appear as obstacles, but as apparent confirmation. Praise, authority, spiritual identity, and the wish to be seen as compassionate can quietly re-establish self-fixation.

Bodhichitta in motion reveals itself most clearly when these supports are absent — when one remains kind without recognition, ethical without witnesses, and patient without certainty of outcome. Such moments expose whether compassion is rooted in awareness or sustained by self-image. 

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Recognizing these tendencies honestly is not a failure of practice, but an expression of it. Vigilance and humility protect the path more effectively than confidence alone.


Compassion as Responsibility

Compassion in Vajrayana is not sentimental, nor heroic. It does not require saving others, nor absorbing their suffering. It manifests as responsibility — for one’s speech, one’s impact, and one’s participation in shared conditions.

Sometimes compassion acts. Sometimes it refrains. Sometimes it listens without intervening. The measure is not intensity, but appropriateness grounded in awareness.

When Bodhichitta is alive, conduct becomes simpler. There is less need to justify oneself and more willingness to adjust. In this way, the Inner Palace and the Outer World are revealed as a single, continuous field of practice.


Support & Reflection

If my writings or reflections resonate with you, you may support this Dharma page here — subscription starts from MYR 2.49/month (≈ USD 0.60).

Footnote: This article is intended solely for general illustration and educational reading. It does not disclose any secret tantric texts or teachings, and makes no attempt to transmit esoteric instructions that are restricted or require formal empowerment. All effort has been made to respect the sacred boundaries of Vajrayana practice and to uphold the integrity of samaya vows and Dharma protectors.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. Your support helps spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheel in the world.

Aspiration for Bodhichitta

May the precious Bodhichitta, which has not yet arisen, arise and not diminish, but rather increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit

By this merit, may we swiftly attain omniscience. Having overcome the enemies of wrongdoing, may we liberate all beings from the ocean of existence, with its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

Note: I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s). Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios. The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.

Chapter 4.1 - The Chakras as the Inner Palace Gates

4.4 The Chakras as the Inner Palace Gates

In the Architecture of Visualization, the external mandala and the internal subtle body are inseparable. The four main energy centers—the Chakras—act as the inner gates of the celestial palace. Each center is not merely a point in space, but a dimension of consciousness that the practitioner "unlocks" through the union of breath and visualization.


  • The Crown (The Gateway of Body): Represented by the syllable OM, this center corresponds to the roof of the mandala. It is the point where the practitioner connects with the infinite "Cloud of Dharma."
  • The Throat (The Gateway of Speech): Represented by AH, this center is the architectural "bridge" where the silent wisdom of the mind begins to vibrate as compassionate action. 

  • The Heart (The Central Throne): Represented by HUNG, this is the very center of the mandala. It is the residence of the "Wisdom Being" (Jnanasattva) and the source from which all visualized light radiates.
  • The Navel (The Foundation): Represented by SWA or HO, this center provides the stability and "heat" (*Tummo*) that fuels the entire visualization structure.

By focusing on these gates, the practitioner ensures that the architecture built in Chapter 3 is not just a mental image, but a lived biological reality. The "winds" of the breath are drawn into these centers, turning the static blueprint into a dynamic, pulsating engine of enlightenment. 

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Support & Reflection 

If my writings or reflections resonate with you, you may support this Dharma page here — subscription starts from MYR 2.49/month (≈ USD 0.60).

Footnote: This article is intended solely for general illustration and educational reading. It does not disclose any secret tantric texts or teachings, and makes no attempt to transmit esoteric instructions that are restricted or require formal empowerment. All effort has been made to respect the sacred boundaries of Vajrayana practice and to uphold the integrity of samaya vows and Dharma protectors.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. Your support helps spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheel in the world.

Aspiration for Bodhichitta
May the precious Bodhichitta, which has not yet arisen, arise and not diminish, but rather increase further and further.
Dedication of Merit
By this merit, may we swiftly attain omniscience. Having overcome the enemies of wrongdoing, may we liberate all beings from the ocean of existence, with its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

Note: I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s). Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios. The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.

Chapter 10 — From Method to Maturation: The Living Fruit of Vajrayana (10/10)


From Method to Maturation: The Living Fruit of Vajrayana

Throughout this series, we have explored the Vajrayana path step by step — its view, motivation, methods, commitments, and ethical foundations. At this point, it is appropriate to pause and reflect, not on what has been understood, but on what has begun to mature.

Vajrayana is often described as a swift path, yet its swiftness does not lie in shortcuts or dramatic experiences. Rather, it lies in the way every aspect of life is brought onto the path. The question at this stage is no longer “What practices do I perform?” but “How has my way of being changed? 

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From Method to Maturation

In the earlier stages of practice, method plays an essential role. Visualization, mantra, ritual, study, and discipline give structure and direction to the mind. They train perception, refine intention, and weaken habitual patterns of grasping.

As practice ripens, however, method gradually fulfills its purpose. Effort becomes less forceful. Awareness becomes more continuous. The practitioner relies less on contrived states and more on a natural presence that does not need constant adjustment.

This shift should not be mistaken for achievement. It is not the abandonment of discipline, but its quiet integration. Method has not disappeared; it has been absorbed into lived experience. 

The Union of Wisdom and Compassion

In Vajrayana, wisdom and compassion are inseparable. Wisdom without compassion becomes cold and self-referential. Compassion without wisdom becomes exhausted and confused. Their union is not an abstract philosophy, but a lived orientation.

As understanding matures, wisdom expresses itself as less fixation — less need to defend identity, opinions, or spiritual status. Compassion expresses itself as a natural responsiveness to the suffering and needs of others, without calculation or display. 

When these two begin to function together, conduct becomes simpler. There is less interest in appearing advanced, and more concern for whether one’s presence eases or burdens the world.

Signs of Maturation

Vajrayana does not measure progress by visions, sensations, or claims of realization. More reliable signs of maturation are often quiet and unremarkable:

  • Reduced reactivity when criticized or misunderstood
  • Greater patience with confusion — one’s own and others’
  • A softening of rigid views and spiritual pride
  • An increasing sense of responsibility for one’s impact on others 

These changes do not arrive suddenly, nor do they remain constant. They fluctuate, revealing both progress and remaining blind spots. Recognizing this honestly is itself a sign of maturation.

Understanding and Embodiment

One of the most subtle dangers on the Vajrayana path is confusing understanding with realization. Clear explanations and refined concepts can create the impression that the work has been completed, when it has only been described.

True maturation reveals itself not in how fluently one speaks about Dharma, but in how one relates to difficulty, disappointment, and ordinary human friction. The path tests itself in daily life, not in ideal conditions.

If practice leads to greater humility, greater kindness, and greater accountability, it is functioning correctly. If it leads to comparison, superiority, or withdrawal from responsibility, something essential has been missed. 

The Living Fruit

The living fruit of Vajrayana is not a final state to be claimed, but a way of engaging with life. Sacred outlook is not confined to formal practice; it is reflected in how one listens, speaks, and responds under pressure.

Guru, deity, and mantra ultimately point back to this moment — to how awareness meets experience, and how compassion informs action. When this connection weakens, the outer forms lose their vitality. When it is alive, even simple conduct becomes profound.

A Quiet Responsibility

As this series concludes, no summary can replace personal examination. The Vajrayana path continually returns responsibility to the practitioner. No lineage, method, or teaching can substitute for lived integrity.

Rather than asking, “How far have I progressed?” a more useful question may be, “How am I changing in relation to others?” The answer to this question unfolds slowly, honestly, and without ceremony.

In this way, the path does not truly end. It matures, moment by moment, through awareness, restraint, compassion, and the willingness to remain teachable. 

Support & Reflection

If my writings or reflections resonate with you, you may support this Dharma page here — subscription starts from MYR 2.49/month (≈ USD 0.60).

Footnote: This article is intended solely for general illustration and educational reading. It does not disclose any secret tantric texts or teachings, and makes no attempt to transmit esoteric instructions that are restricted or require formal empowerment. 

All effort has been made to respect the sacred boundaries of Vajrayana practice and to uphold the integrity of samaya vows and Dharma protectors.



Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. Your support helps spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheel in the world.

Aspiration for Bodhichitta

May the precious Bodhichitta, which has not yet arisen, arise and not diminish, but rather increase further and further. 

Dedication of Merit

By this merit, may we swiftly attain omniscience. Having overcome the enemies of wrongdoing, may we liberate all beings from the ocean of existence, with its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

Note: I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s). Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios. The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Chapter 2: The Inner Alchemy of Devotion

The Inner Alchemy of Devotion

In our first chapter, we established that Guru Yoga is the "spine" of tantric practice. To deepen this connection, we must look beyond the physical form of the teacher and understand the Inner Mechanics of Devotion. This is not mere hero-worship; it is a sophisticated psychological and spiritual "alchemy" designed to bridge the gap between our current state and our ultimate potential. 

The Three Levels of the Guru

In the Vajrayana tradition, the "Guru" is understood across three distinct yet inseparable levels. Recognizing these helps the practitioner maintain stability in their practice:

  • The Outer Guru: The living, breathing teacher who gives instructions, oral transmissions, and empowerments. They act as a physical mirror for our progress.
  • The Inner Guru: The realization that the teacher is the embodiment of all Buddhas and deities. At this level, we connect with the Sambhogakaya—the energetic qualities of enlightened wisdom. 
  • The Secret Guru: The ultimate realization that the Guru’s wisdom-mind and our own fundamental nature (Buddha-nature) are non-dual. The external teacher exists to point us toward this internal truth. 
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Cultivating Pure Perception (Daknang)

The transformative power of Guru Yoga relies on Pure Perception. This involves training the mind to see the environment as a pure land and the teacher as an enlightened being. By intentionally shifting our view, we begin to dissolve the habit of seeing flaws—not because the teacher is perfect in a conventional sense, but because the mind of the practitioner becomes a vessel for perfection

"When we see the Guru as a Buddha, we receive the blessings of a Buddha. When we see the Guru as an ordinary person, we receive only the benefits of an ordinary person."

By treating the relationship as a sacred bond, the practitioner opens the "heart-center" to receive Adhiṣṭhāna—the waves of grace or spiritual energy that flow from the lineage through the master. 


Support & Reflection

If my writings or reflections resonate with you, you may support this Dharma page here — subscription starts from MYR 2.49/month (≈ USD 0.60)

Footnote: This article is intended solely for general illustration and educational reading. It does not disclose any secret tantric texts or teachings, and makes no attempt to transmit esoteric instructions that are restricted or require formal empowerment.

All effort has been made to respect the sacred boundaries of Vajrayana practice and to uphold the integrity of samaya vows and Dharma protectors.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. Your support helps spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheel in the world.

Aspiration for Bodhichitta

May the precious Bodhichitta, which has not yet arisen, arise and not diminish, but rather increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit

By this merit, may we swiftly attain omniscience. Having overcome the enemies of wrongdoing, may we liberate all beings from the ocean of existence, with its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

Note: I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s). Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios. The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.

Saturday, December 27, 2025

The Power of Guru Yoga - Brief Introduction


The Power of Guru Yoga

Guru Yoga is the heartbeat of Vajrayana practice, a profound path to realizing our own Buddha-nature through devotion, connection, and inner transformation.

What is Guru Yoga?

Guru Yoga (Tib. Lamé Nédro) means "union with the guru." It’s about merging your mind with the enlightened mind of your teacher – a bridge to the wisdom lineage

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How to Practice Guru Yoga

  • Visualize the Guru: Picture your guru (or a Buddha) above your head, radiating light.
  • Invoke Blessings: Focus on their wisdom, compassion, and power.
  • Mind-Merging: Feel their qualities dissolving into you, transforming your perception. 

Example Practice:

"I visualize Padmasambhava above me, surrounded by light. I pray: 'Guru, grant your blessings so my mind may realize clarity and compassion.' I breathe in their energy, letting it fill me."

Why It Works 

Guru Yoga dismantles ego barriers, accelerates insight, and deepens devotion. It’s a shortcut to seeing your own Buddha-nature.

Conclusion

Guru Yoga isn’t about worship – it’s about unlocking your inner potential. As you practice, the guru’s wisdom becomes yours.


Support & Reflection 

If my writings or reflections resonate with you, you may support this Dharma page here — subscription starts from MYR 2.49/month (≈ USD 0.60).

Footnote: This article is intended solely for general illustration and educational reading. It does not disclose any secret tantric texts or teachings, and makes no attempt to transmit esoteric instructions that are restricted or require formal empowerment.

All effort has been made to respect the sacred boundaries of Vajrayana practice and to uphold the integrity of samaya vows and Dharma protectors.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. Your support helps spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheel in the world. 


Aspiration for Bodhichitta

May the precious Bodhichitta, which has not yet arisen, arise and not diminish, but rather increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit

By this merit, may we swiftly attain omniscience. Having overcome the enemies of wrongdoing, may we liberate all beings from the ocean of existence, with its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

Note: I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s). Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios. The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.

Chapter one - The Essence of Guru Yoga: A Path to Spiritual Transformation

The Essence of Guru Yoga: A Path to Spiritual Transformation

In the Vajrayana Buddhist tradition, Guru Yoga stands as the "spine" of all tantric practices. It is a profound method of merging one’s own mind with the wisdom-mind of a spiritual teacher. By viewing the Guru not merely as a person, but as a living embodiment of the Buddha, practitioners create a powerful conduit for blessings, merit, and the realization of their own inherent Buddha-nature.

Through a combination of visualization, devotion, and mantra recitation, Guru Yoga bridges the gap between ordinary perception and enlightened reality, connecting the practitioner to the entire lineage of realized masters.  

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Core Components of the Practice

  • Devotion (Bhakti): The foundation of the practice involves cultivating deep reverence and faith. This transforms the practitioner's view, moving beyond the Guru’s ordinary appearance to recognize their enlightened qualities.
  • Visualization: Practitioners visualize the Guru—either in their human form or as a specific deity like Lama Tsongkhapa or Guru Padmasambhava—embodying the totality of enlightened wisdom. 
  • The Union of Minds: The heart of the practice is the meditation on merging one’s own consciousness with the Guru's wisdom-mind, allowing for the direct reception of spiritual transmissions.
  • Mantra and Lineage: Through specific mantra recitation and the visualization of the "Refuge Tree," the practitioner taps into the vast spiritual energy of the entire lineage that flows through the master. 

Levels and Purpose

Guru Yoga operates across multiple levels of Buddhist training. While the Sutra level focuses on foundational appreciation and ethics, the Tantra level introduces sophisticated deity yoga and internal alchemy. In Tibetan Buddhism (Tantrayana), this practice is considered essential; it is the primary channel through which all other spiritual exercises gain their potency.

Ultimately, the purpose of Guru Yoga is fourfold: 

Purification Clearing negative karma and obscurations.
Realization Gaining direct insight into the nature of reality.
Strengthening Empowering all other daily spiritual practices.
Awakening Recognizing the Guru's qualities as your own Buddha-nature.

In essence, Guru Yoga is a sacred technology of devotion. It utilizes the spiritual master as a mirror, reflecting our own potential back to us and accelerating the journey toward enlightenment. 



Support & Reflection 

If my writings or reflections resonate with you, you may support this Dharma page here — subscription starts from MYR 2.49/month (≈ USD 0.60).

Footnote: This article is intended solely for general illustration and educational reading. It does not disclose any secret tantric texts or teachings, and makes no attempt to transmit esoteric instructions that are restricted or require formal empowerment.

All effort has been made to respect the sacred boundaries of Vajrayana practice and to uphold the integrity of samaya vows and Dharma protectors.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. Your support helps spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheel in the world. 

Aspiration for Bodhichitta

May the precious Bodhichitta, which has not yet arisen, arise and not diminish, but rather increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit

By this merit, may we swiftly attain omniscience. Having overcome the enemies of wrongdoing, may we liberate all beings from the ocean of existence, with its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

Note: I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s). Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios. The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.

Chapter 9 — Vajrayana Ethics: Conduct with Awareness and Compassion

Chapter 9 — Vajrayana Ethics: Conduct with Awareness and Compassion

Ethics in Vajrayana Buddhism is not a rigid system of rules imposed from the outside. Rather, it is a living expression of awareness, compassion, and wisdom arising naturally from the practitioner’s view.

While foundational ethical principles are shared with all Buddhist traditions, Vajrayana emphasizes the integration of conduct with realization. Ethics are not merely about avoiding wrongdoing, but about responding to each situation with clarity and compassionate intention.

1. Ethics Beyond Moral Rigidity 

In ordinary understanding, ethics are often reduced to fixed standards of right and wrong. Vajrayana recognizes that such rigidity may fail to address the complexity of real-life situations.

True ethical conduct arises from awareness of mind, circumstances, and consequences. When awareness is present, compassionate action naturally follows. When awareness is absent, even well-intended rules can become instruments of harm.

Thus, Vajrayana ethics are dynamic rather than mechanical. 

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2. The Role of Intention

In Vajrayana, intention (cetana) is central. An action is not judged solely by its outer form, but by the motivation behind it.

Actions rooted in ego, pride, or self-interest—even if outwardly “virtuous”—can reinforce samsaric patterns. Conversely, actions motivated by bodhichitta, even when imperfect, move the practitioner closer to awakening.

This emphasis on intention requires honesty and continual self-reflection.

3. Samaya as Ethical Foundation

For Vajrayana practitioners, ethical conduct is deeply connected to samaya—sacred commitments made to the guru, the lineage, and the path itself.

Samaya is not a list of prohibitions but a living relationship. Breaking samaya often begins subtly: through arrogance, neglect, or loss of devotion rather than overt misconduct.

Maintaining samaya means aligning thought, speech, and action with respect, gratitude, and humility. 

4. Compassion as Skillful Means

Vajrayana ethics recognize that compassion must be skillful. Blind kindness without wisdom may enable suffering rather than alleviate it.

Sometimes compassionate conduct appears gentle; at other times, it may be firm or boundary-setting. The measure of ethical action is not how it appears, but whether it genuinely reduces suffering and supports awakening.

This requires courage, discernment, and responsibility. 

5. Ethical Challenges in Daily Life

Modern life presents ethical challenges rarely addressed directly in classical texts—workplace pressure, digital behavior, social conflict, and emotional exhaustion.

Vajrayana practice invites the practitioner to bring awareness into these spaces. Ethics are practiced not only in temples or meditation halls, but in conversations, decisions, and reactions throughout the day.

Each moment becomes an opportunity to embody the path. 

6. When Ethics Fail

Failure is inevitable. Vajrayana does not demand perfection, but sincerity.

When ethical lapses occur, the response is not guilt or denial, but recognition, purification, and recommitment. Confession, remorse, and restoration strengthen rather than weaken the path.

In this way, mistakes themselves become teachers.

7. Ethics as Expression of Realization 

As realization deepens, ethical conduct becomes spontaneous. One no longer asks, “What should I do?” but naturally acts in harmony with wisdom and compassion.

This spontaneity is not careless freedom—it is responsibility grounded in insight.

Thus, Vajrayana ethics are not a constraint, but the natural fragrance of awakened mind.


Support & Reflection 

If my writings or reflections resonate with you, you may support this Dharma page here — subscription starts from MYR 2.49/month (≈ USD 0.60).


Footnote

This article is intended solely for general illustration and educational reading. It does not disclose any secret tantric texts or teachings, and makes no attempt to transmit esoteric instructions that are restricted or require formal empowerment.

All effort has been made to respect the sacred boundaries of Vajrayana practice and to uphold the integrity of samaya vows and Dharma protectors.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. Your support helps spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheel in the world. 

Aspiration for Bodhichitta

May the precious Bodhichitta, which has not yet arisen, arise and not diminish, but rather increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit

By this merit, may we swiftly attain omniscience. Having overcome the enemies of wrongdoing, may we liberate all beings from the ocean of existence, with its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

Note

I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s). Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios. The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.