My garage had a GFCI outlet in a single gang box. The power to the box also supplied unswitched power to an exterior flood light (with a photoelectric switch in the fixture) and to another box that had the switch for the interior garage light. When the wall was recently removed for an unrelated renovation project, I had the opportunity to replace the single gang with a triple gang box, move the switch and add a switch to the exterior light. I wired the line to the GFCI and the 2 switches to the GFCI's load. (the original switch location became a junction box). All grounds were wired together as were the neutrals. The 2 switches were wired together with a lead from the load of the GFCI. When either switch was turned on, the GFCI tripped. The GFCI worked fine and was checked that it was wired correctly. I solved the problem by wiring the switches directly to the line "behind" the GFCI switch, though I wonder if I am giving up something safety wise by doing so. Was my original wiring incorrect? Am I OK wiring it as is? Thanks.