
The book's message of optimism falls in line with a recent Harvard School of Public Health study that said people who are optimistic live on average 11 to 15% longer, and they have a 50% greater shot of making it to age 85. And it lands in your lap on the day you needed to see it." She started a social media movement where she's sharing that message. She picked it up, she opened the envelope and it said, 'Everything will be okay, you are going to be fine.' How did this person know? She saw a bright yellow envelope stuck in-between the meats in the meat counter. She's got six kids, she's in the grocery store, she weeping as she's doing her marketing. "This woman had lost her job, she had gotten her pink slip that day. Among the "I lost my job" stories was one that particularly struck her. There were thousands of stories submitted for the book, which were divided into various topics.

But move forward and get new things going in your life.'" You take that with you, but you move forward in life because that experience has become a part of you – and keep it with you, keep the learnings from it with you. She said, 'No, no.' She corrected me, she said, 'You do not move on, you move forward.

"That was taught to me by a friend whose husband died in the September 11th terror attack.

"What's the difference between moving on and moving forward?" "You said, 'When stuff happens in life, as it does to all of us, it's not so much about moving on, it's about moving forward through challenges, through grief, through disappointment,'" said co-host Gayle King. And no one would have bet 50 cents that I would have gotten my career back, I would have been back on television, I would have been part of a book series like this." So, did that Chicago Tribune headline "Left for dead by the side of the road" describe how she felt? "No! That was how I was!" Norville said on "CBS This Morning" Monday.
