For anyone who wants to answer, before having kids, how much time did you give to considering and weighing the following:
1. Financial cost
Totally a consideration. For years we were just making ends meet. Getting retirement started, a 6 mos aviation emergency fund, and getting our first real home put together. However, we were at a point where our financial house was in order, and we would still be able to manage life and some extraneous things other than just growing the kids
2. What would happen in the case of a divorce
Best case, it was a minor consideration. Actually, we have examples of people not divorced and should be (You know; "We stayed together for the kids") and the downline effect on the kids. We also saw examples of divorced parents that have raised great kids. Ultimately, we have a dynamic marriage anyway due to the career field. We had a quick discussion about it, but did not pay it much attention.
3. The possibility that the baby might not be physically or mentally healthy when born and would require constant care (and how that would affect not just the parents, but the quality of life of the child)
Of course this is a concern, and freaked me out from time to time, however it is part of the unknown of the whole process to my wife and I. We'd never really been around small kids, care givers to kids or anything like that. With this, and so many other topics, we tried to deal with the "What-ifs", but ultimately, you can only guess at so much with realistic expectations.
4. How your own schedule and priorities would change
Like the previous question, we tried to wrap our heads around it, and had some baseline plans. However, as soon as our first child arrived, we were dropped into a fog of war and did the best we could. The concepts in our minds certainly weren't what occurred. That being said, we went with what was presented and moved forward in life re-establishing a balance
5. Who would work, who would stay home, and what would happen if the plan changed when one of the parents wanted to do something different
We did discuss this, and in our case our plan wouldn't change. Unless of course I hit powerball on Saturday and I can call in rich on Monday.
6. The expectations of each marital partner (romantic, sexual, normal attention) post-baby and how to handle the shift that would come when attention and energy diverted to the child
Again, like question 4 and 3, there is only so much we can discuss. On this topic I think that it is far easier to establish a realistic foundation.
Much like parents that are detached from their kids and plop them in front of a TV or XBox, so are the parents that dote on their children to the extent that they a) can't see any wrong or behaviour trends that are outside societal norms and/or b) totally ignore their partner.
Unlike being childless, with children or even someone who is always working or advancing a career, you have to FORCE time for a balance. You don't have as much schedule slop.
Each parent needs time, alone, with the children; you need time all together as a family; the parents need time to maintain THEIR relationship; and each parent needs some adult time alone to keep from losing their identity
7. How to handle a child that wasn't what you expected (emotional trouble, psychological problems, or simply a kid you don't like very much - there's a confession by a mother on a parenting website that says she loves her son, but she just doesn't like him very much)
In our case this did not happen. However, there are so many things life can throw at you at any given time; tragedy, inconvenience, strife that you can't prepare for everything. Sometimes you just have to make-do and swim as best you can.