Could you discuss that a bit further, charity? Are you saying that the precipitating event DOES NOT cause the abuser to become violent?
What do you think causes the abuser to become violent?
This is all a part of an ideology within counseling psychology, a set of disciplines that have taken on much of the baggage of the culture of the past 35 years or so into its philosophical precincts. The idea that a woman never is involved in the aggravation of physical abuse is a remnant of the insertion of radical feminist ideas into psychology. The same factors are at work in claiming that Black human beings can never be racists or that children, in court, having recovered "repressed memories", never lie.
The imposition of ideology into psychology is a dangerous thing, as we saw during the Satanic child abuse hysteria within the helping professions (especially social work) during the late 80s to mid 90s. Of course, physical abuse is never justified, but in being clear about nonjustificaition, there is no reason to assume that woman cannot and do not incite the kind of anger that can lead to violence. I've known personally, woman who would egg on and egg on a man and dare him to hit her, cutting him down in the most vicious ways she could with personal intimate knowledge and biting sarcasm. I've known woman who like to see men get in fights at bars, and would start verbal wars with other men in order to get a conflagration going.
This, of course, justifies nothing, as far as the man is concerned, but its pure fantasy to paint all woman, as a matter of ideological axiom, even when they are victims of violence, as passive participants.