For ColoradoBrewMeister, sounds like the yeast is post-lag phase and is getting ready to rock and roll... Let her ride for a couple of weeks (depending on style and OG) before taking any readings. When you do, finally, take a reading, taste the sample (after you get the hydrometer readings from it)... If the SG is close to the estimate, give it another couple of days and test again. If it's not changed, give it another couple of days and test again. Taste the sample each time. This will help you to learn how the flavors mature as the brew ferments. Once it's at a stable SG (the FG) give it another few days to a week on the yeast before thinking about bottling it up. Use one of the online tools to figure out how much priming sugar to add (the temperature the wort fermented at is important in figuring out the sugar amount). Make your priming solution, then rack on top of that in the bottling bucket. This will mix it up completely. Make sure all your bottles are ready to be filled (clean and sanitized) before you start. If using caps, have those soaking in sanitizer too (StarSan being my preference). Cap them up, and let them sit at 70F for at least three weeks before chilling one down (2-3 days in the fridge) before sampling one. When the carbonation is complete, you'll know it...
One thing I will recommend (something I picked up at a brew pub just today), pour your home brew into a room temperature glass/mug. Don't use frosted/frozen glasses/mugs for it. I tried this tonight on my Irish Red Ale and it really changed the flavor of it. In a good way.
Do post up what you're brewing... Include the OG of the wort as it went into the carboy. Also include what yeast you used. If you can, post up the recipe too. It usually helps for people to give proper parameters when they know WHAT you've brewed. Fermentation time can be shorter on lower OG brews, where higher OG brews will need more time. If you're brewing in the warmer range, for the yeast used, you'll also need more time to eliminate potential off flavors. So, if you have a better control over the temperature the wort is fermenting at, you could shorten the total fermentation time.