P.S.: @ neandermagnon: in the States, "job site" is common usage.
Interested in feedback on this:
The sun forces its way past the edges of the blinds, streaming narrow bars of light across the floor and onto my comforter. For once, I'm wide awake almost immediately and turn off the alarm without complaint. It's moving day.
This is very nicely written and puts vivid a picture in my head. However so far there's nothing really to hook me in terms of what's happening in the story. I suspect that you're starting a little too early. So far I've got an ordinary bedroom, a sunny day and a character who seems quite happy and excited about moving day. All very happy and ordinary. I expect that some of the feedback will focus on the potential issues with waking up openings, one of which being that they can be very bland and it can take too long for the actual story to get going (hence starting too early). Personally, I don't mind waking up openings if you've got an ordinary character waking up to something extraordinary, or an extraordinary (e.g. alien or something) character waking up on what is to them an ordinary day but to us it's highly unusual. But an ordinary character waking up happy on an ordinary day (moving house isn't that unusual) when the sun is shining is very bland. If it's not an ordinary day/world/housemove/etc, then I'd advise dropping a hint of that in the opening lines (though not in such a way as to disrupt the flow of the text - what you've got there IMO flows well). If it's ordinary but the story hasn't started yet, then maybe start a bit later. Or start where there's more going on than waking up, e.g. various hassles of getting furniture into the removals van, etc.
However please bear in mind that I don't know the genre or target audience, and if this type of opening is what's expected, then go with that.