If she gets a reaction out of you, she’ll continue to seek those reactions for her supply and keep doing it and escalate.
In honor of Nietzsche's birthday, I'd like to offer you this quote: "Most people are far too much occupied with themselves to be malicious."
At the risk of upsetting anyone, I believe it is a far too common occurrence that LBS break their own hearts even further by believing the myth that the actions and words of a fractured person in crisis are focused at all in any way toward the LBS. Plainly stated, the person in crisis isn't thinking about the LBS. At all. They are focused inward. It is a natural reaction for a heartbroken LBS to believe that their spouse is still factoring them into their choices, even when those choices now include lying, stealing, cheating, etc. It is a natural desire on the part of the newly BDed LBS to believe that their spouse is acting out in an attempt to make the LBS notice them.
We always say it's not personal, that the person in crisis would have done this to whomever they married, that it's not about us. That is true in
all regards. It's never about the LBS. When the spouse is engaged in an affair, it's not about the LBS. When the spouse is cruising tinder, it's not about the LBS. When the previously demure spouse starts wearing thigh high leather boots, it's not about the LBS. When the spouse converts religions, buys a motorcycle, quits their job, moves to South of France...it's not about the LBS. No matter what it looks like, no matter how "obvious" it seems, it's not about the LBS.
Believing that anything they do is about you is zero benefit, 100% detrimental. Spending time watching her, looking for clues, wondering what it might mean if she makes this private or that public or posts this picture or deletes that picture, all that time wasted is nothing but wasted time.
She's too preoccupied with herself to be devising sly ways to get a rise out of you or hurt you. Her actions are hurtful, because she's unilaterally chosen to break the partnership you believed you were jointly building for many years. That decision was made by her, for her benefit, without your knowledge or input, and of course that is shocking at first and extremely painful. But you get to decide what to do with that pain. Taking the focus off what she's doing goes a long way to mitigating the hurt. Watching for hidden smoke signals or signs of a secret devious scheme to get you to chase her, react to her or fight for her only prolongs the agony.
The desire to be loved is the last illusion. Give it up and you shall be free. ~ Margaret Atwood