May 04, 2018

Can cats sense death? “I think the cat knew mum was going to die.”

In 2006, as her mother lay dying in a nursing home bed, Louise Cable-Tuck was surprised to see a pure white cat saunter into the nursing home room.

Louise’s mother, Toni, had been unwell for several years with a cruel degenerative disease, and the family was preparing for her final days.

The cat leapt up onto the bed, and made itself comfortable.

“She seemed to know where she was going,” Louise told HelloCare.

When the nursing home staff saw the cat, they offered to take it away, saying it lived in another part of the nursing home.

But Louise said it was fine, that she and Toni were both animal lovers, and she thought her mother, who was not conscious, would like the cat to be there in her final days.

The home had set Louise up in a bed beside her mother, and for the remainder of the day, Louise, her mother, and the cat remained quietly in the room.

Louise nodded off to sleep in the evening, only to be woken just before midnight.

The cat, who she had come to know was called Duchess, was sitting up, alert and awake, and staring fixedly at Toni, who was taking slow, shallow breaths.

Duchess and Louise watched together as Toni took her final breaths, and eventually passed away.

“I glanced up at the clock, and it was just on midnight. After my mother died, Duchess just got up and left,” Louise said.

Louise said that having the cat in the room with her when her mother died was enormously comforting.

“I’m just glad the cat was there,” she said. “Mum was a very vibrant person. She loved cats. She would have been happy to know the cat was there.”

Though Louise describes herself as a sceptical person, she thinks animals appear to have a special kind of knowing.

“I really love animals, and I do sometimes think they have some sort of special sense,” she said.

“I think Duchess knew mum was going to die.”

Louise’s daughter gave Toni a white porcelain cat for her seventieth birthday, just a month before she died. The ornament was placed carefully on Toni’s chest when she was buried.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. I’m glad she loves animals …I hope the thought of sending poor animals to the ghastliness if the slaughter house also upsets her .

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

5 questions to ask yourself before you dob – advice for adults and kids from an ethicist

Is Australia is a nation of dobbers? A lot of our ideas about dobbing are formed in childhood – and as any parent, carer or teacher knows, not all dobbing is warranted. Read More

Curtains that tell stories of love and laughter in aged care

Step inside Lucy’s world and discover how the simple act of opening and closing curtains can capture a lifetime of memories in aged care, courtesy of storyteller Michael Preston. Read More

Books, books, books – a fun way of turning the tide

Books have always been an integral part of my life. Back in the day, children such as I were called book worms. Is that still a thing amongst the digitally-hooked young today? Anyway, I was, and I still am, one such, now balancing my reading between loyalty to physical books and the convenience of ebooks. Read More
Advertisement