Lots of good insights in Hot Damn's post.
I think children of both sexes can have challenging, often traumatic experiences in early life and later on that will affect how the relate to other human beings. There experiences may be different because they are boys or girls both to do with social conditioning and differing risks of certain phenomenon for boys and girls (e.g. sexual abuse 6 times more likely for girls, physical abuse more likely for boys.)
How they internalise the experience, try to make sense of it (or not) and how it influences their later relationships can also vary between the genders. In simplest terms, girls and women tend to internalise the bad experiences, feeling they were somehow to blame, often punishing themselves in some way like self-harming, alcohol or drug use, eating disorders. Boys tend to externalise the experience, someone else is to blame for the pain they've suffered so they have to get one back by hurting someone else (e.g. getting into fights, aggressive and anti-social behaviour, offending, etc.)
So if two people bring this conditioning to a male-female relationships, you can kind of see where it's likely to go.
On one hand, it can be beneficial to try and understand why another person has done something that has hurt you. It can be harder to just accept that sometimes "shit happens," particularly when the shit came from someone you loved, respected and trusted and felt loved, trusted and respected you.
But, and it's a big BUT, there's also the risk that women will seek to understand unacceptable, abusive and controlling behaviour from men as a way of effectively excusing it. There are shelves heaving in bookshops across the land, selling solutions to women in abusive, controlling relationships based on the idea that if they just understood their men, just adjusted their thinking and behaviour to take account of what their men are feeling, all would be sunny in the garden. That really sucks because frankly, it don't work like that and when it doesn't work, women are likely to blame themselves (again) because they didn't "do it right."
Sometimes, it's really best to just accept that something is rather than try to unpick it to the nth degree, seeing an answer, an understanding that may just not be there at all. It can take up alot of valuable time, energy and creativity in that pursuit - resources that women can better use getting on their feet and moving forward.