Here's a link to a talk by Thich Nhat Hanh on the "Island Inside" suggested by Paul from the Berkeley Dharma & Recovery group:
http://youtu.be/1un_agCuMzw
And here's an written excerpt of the talk (with thanks to
EricaZen):
There are days when you feel that it’s not your day. Everything goes wrong. And the more effort you make the situation becomes worse. Of course you have gone through days like that in your life. You fail in everything, you suffer, you get angry, people blame you, you are not happy… you are frustrated. And you tell yourself that you have to make more effort, but the more effort you make, the worse the situation becomes. And now it is time to stop everything, it’s time to go home to yourself and take refuge. You have to close your windows: the eyes, the ears… you should close your windows. You should not be in touch with the outside any more. You have to close the windows of your hermitage because there is a hermitage within yourself that is the island of self that you are going to discover. If you continue to be on the outside, you continue to suffer. That is why in moments like that you have to go home to the island of self. And the first thing you do is exactly the same thing that I did at the hermitage, to close the five windows: Eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body, mind. Don’t look, don’t listen, don’t touch, don’t think… stop everything, to prevent the strong wind from the outside to continue to blow in and to make you miserable. Because the eye is a window, the ear is a window, the mind is a window, if you keep them open the wind of disturbance will blow in and make it worse and worse. Don’t try anymore… STOP TRYING and shut the windows, you shut also the door, and you go to the chimney and make a fire. You want to get the feeling of warmth, comfort… by practicing mindful breathing, going home to yourself, and rearrange everything, your feelings, your perceptions, your emotions, how they are all scattered all over, it’s a mess. You can now recognize each feeling, each emotion, and you have to collect them, like I collected the sheets of paper that were scattered a little bit all over. Practice mindfulness and concentration and tidy up everything inside yourself. Everyone has a hermitage within.