I've been married twice, and I have one child from each marriage, plus I have a child from a long-term relationship in which I did not marry.
All three children are younger than 8 and I must stay in touch with each of their fathers in order to co-parent. My new partner, a woman, is jealous of my children's fathers and makes it difficult to communicate with them.
Each time one of them calls or I have to call them, she gets angry and makes my life miserable. With three kids, this is a daily occurrence. I'm not gay, I just fell for this woman, but now I'm wondering if I should leave or stay?
We rarely advise someone to stay or leave simply because it is difficult to figure out the whole story from a letter from only one side.
However, you have given us enough info about your behavior to make a suggestion: Ask your girlfriend to leave - at least temporarily - and take a good hard look at your life and your choices. Just because you're attracted to someone is not enough reason to move them in and start a life together, especially if you have kids watching. It doesn't matter if you are gay or straight, but that you're changing partners faster than a speeding bullet.
Your children are young but developing their outlook about how to manage relationships and how grown-ups behave in the world. So slow down, get counseling and examine what you're doing until you are ready to enter a real relationship with someone who will help you raise your children and with whom you can demonstrate positive life skills.
About your partner's anger and insecurity: she's gay, and you've said you aren't and you must interact with three former heterosexual partners - something she probably finds intimidating.
She, too, should be examining her choices because, bottom line, going in you both should have known there was a very slim chance a long-term monogamous relationship can succeed when one partner knows she's gay while the other vows she is not.
Blackstone-Ford and her husband's ex-wife, Sharyl Jupe, are co-founders of Bonus Families and the authors of "Ex-Etiquette for Parents: Good Behavior After a Divorce or Separation." They may be contacted at ee@bonusfamilies.com.