Yes, as does Professor Koshan, and I do a lot of judicial education as well.
Sometimes that's right. It is about awareness and understanding that behaviours on their own might look either not like offences or like minor offences: things like destroying joint property that's owned by them or the spouse driving erratically and at high speed when the wife and children are in the car. There are recognized risk factors and patterns of behaviour here. We're not starting from zero, and we need to be able to recognize that.
We also have to name and reject the persistent stereotype that women engage in these family court processes only in order to punish dads and to keep them away from their kids as some kind of vindictive move for having been scorned. That's a pernicious stereotype. It's a myth, frankly. Women don't engage themselves in the family court system generally unless they absolutely have to. That's part of what feeds into the denial about just how serious this behaviour is.