Product Description
he biography of a medical maverick who is challenging scientific convention with his astounding approach to achieving and maintaining health Dr. Irving Dardik’s radical notions about how all matter moves in interconnected waves has drawn deep skepticism from physicists, and his early attempts to put his theory into practice in the field of health care got him banned from practicing medicine in the 1990s. But now, after a decade’s worth of rigorous research that seem… More >>
Making Waves: Irving Dardik and His Superwave Principle
Tags: dr irving, maintaining health, maverick, notions, physicists, practicing medicine, principle product, rigorous research, skepticism, superwave principle
#1 by C Greywolf on June 29, 2010 - 10:54 am
I really liked the book, on a literary level. It was well written, engaging, and thought provoking. However, it really fails, and fails badly at giving the how to’s. I’d love to try the protocol the Dradik has developed and the book describes, but there just isn’t enough detail about how to institute it. i feel like I was shown a menu and then told I couldn’t ordewr the food. From what I undersatnd, Dardi charges $5,ooo a month to enroll in his program! That leaves out most of the planet. So much for sharing usable information.
Rating: 2 / 5
#2 by Roger Lewin on June 29, 2010 - 11:53 am
In his/her short “review,” “jubjub” makes the extremely serious accusation that either I, as author, or Irving Dardik, as the subject of the book, must have “paid” some of the reviewers, because of their positive comments. (”Jubjub” uses the derogatory term “infomercial language.”) While I refrain from stooping to respond to such a base claim, I would ask why “jubjub” would seek to hide behind a mask of anonymity while making such a claim about me in such a public arena? Does she/he not have the decency or courage to simply identify themselves? What does she/he have to hide, if anything? (In entering this “review,” I was asked to select a rating; as author, I simply entered its current rating, not wishing to skew the rate either way.)
Rating: 4 / 5
#3 by Morton Wolkowitz on June 29, 2010 - 1:06 pm
I have had personal experience with Irving Dardik’s revolutionary wellness program, and I can vouch for its efficacy. Making Waves tells the story of Dardik’s journey to developing a revolutionary approach to health and disease, based on his SuperWave Principle. The Principle is far reaching, and goes far beyond the health/disease realm. It’s a terrific read, and details Dardik’s struggle with the medical establishment, and his ultimate vindication. I recommend the book to anyone who is interested in learning more about their own body, and about the interconnectedness of nature throughout all of nature. It’s a true story, but it’s so fantastic that it reads like a novel!
Rating: 5 / 5
#4 by Jonathan Meyers on June 29, 2010 - 2:02 pm
This is a groundbreaking book that should be read by anyone and everyone, especially those struggling with their health. As a person living with MS for over 15 years and doing the exercise program described in this book for 13 of those years, I am speaking from experience.
Without question this program has given me a life to look forward to. I don’t want to even think of what my life would be like today had I not been connected with Irv over a decade ago.
Now years later, my family and I would all agree that our decision to invest in this unique health program was worth every single penny! Compared to the the cost of a lifetime of medication and therapy and heartache… I got a bargain. Lucky for you, you can start the program for less than $20 for this book.
Get the book. Do the program. You’ll be glad you did. I know I am.
Rating: 5 / 5
#5 by Whitney R. Godfrey on June 29, 2010 - 2:11 pm
Being Irving Dardik’s daughter has been miraculous not because of his life and world changing ideas that I grown up luckily knowing, but because of the lives I have personally seen him save. The ever changing circle of people that have opened their eyes to the theory, were all forever changed both mentally and physically in ways that conventional science does not think possible. His underlying principle has brought so many to tears of joy, thanking him for what has, and will continue to bring to the world. Because I have personally seen this happen, my review of this book, and my father’s theory in general, is not skewed; I base this review on the people he has touched. This biography explains impeccably the journey that my Father had to go through to be recognized, and even more incredibly admired, by renowned physicists all over the world. I highly recommend reading this book to get the full story of what his theory is, and how it works.
Rating: 5 / 5