I recently signed up for NaNoWriMo, and the experience has been pretty great. I've learned about writing blindfolded. I've written a passage this way, and then got stuck.
Into the darkness a small drop of light descended. It lit up, first, rough leather boots, then linen trousers bandaged at the ankles, then a a leather jacket, crumpled and torn. Then muscular and scarred arms carrying a rusty saber and a torch - the source of the light. Finally, the face appeared - male, gaunt, with somewhat sickly large alert eyes and a stubble several days old. The man descended a narrow stone stairs sticking to a solid rock wall, with a stooped posture of a fugitive expecting to be attacked at any moment. Carefully moving his feet from step to step he waved the torch from side to side trying to light up the interior of the room he was in. It wasn’t much use, for the room was quite large. From the rectangular corner of the entrance where the man was it gradually sloped away into irregular shapes of stalactites and stalagmites, with deep dark tunnels between them defying the torch’s flame entirely.
In the middle of his descent the man halted, peering and listening to any movement in the room. All was quiet. The man reached the uneven floor of the room and looked around once more. Avoiding his eyes until now, a small wooden chest stuck to the side of the stairs. The man, keeping his back to the wall, approached the chest. It was locked, but the wood was rotten, lined with cracks from age. The man crouched and stroked the lid of the chest. The palm of his hand came out covered with brown dust. He slapped his hands together to clean off the dust, while looking thoughtfully into one of the tunnel openings. After a moment, he got up and put the tip of his saber into the slit between the lock and the wood of the chest, and pushed. With a crack magnified by the walls of the room, the slit widened into a gap. The man removed the saber, and put it under the lock on the other side. After another effort, the lock hung on a couple of nails and its tongue. Glancing into the darkness over his shoulder, the man sheathed his weapon and grabbed the lock. Then, putting his back and legs into it, he pulled the lock off together with the lid of the chest, to the accompaniment of a screech of the nails and crunching of the wood. The man bent down to examine the treasure. It wasn’t much - only a parchment scroll wrapped around a bronze rod. The man picked up the scroll and unwrapped it with interest. The parchment was covered with a string of runes, and the man seemed familiar with them, as he started to read the text, moving his lips. He finished and wrinkled his brow in confusion, as if the scroll presented him with a riddle. He didn’t have time to puzzle it out - one of the tunnels out of the room echoed with angry oinks and tapping of hooves indicating that the man’s struggle hadn’t gone unnoticed.
Clutching the scroll and the torch in one hand, the man picked up his saber with the other, and faced the entrance of the tunnel. The tapping grew into click-clacking, bright red eyes flashed briefly, and moments later a six feet tall extremely hairy man with a pig’s head ran into the light of the torch. The monster staggered, phased by the flame.
Also I'm not sure it's a good writing style in general. Anybody up for a little feedback? I promise to respond constructively.