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Cats and Audio Gear Don't Mix or Can You Forgive Your Cat

Sorry for your loss. I'm a dog person, so I am biased.

Many people would say that cats try to get in the way of anything that distracts owners from sole focus on the cat themselves.

I posted this as a gift link in humor. I think they expire after 30 days? So reposting as text. Maybe her book can help?

Carole Wilbourn, Who Put Cats on the Couch, Dies at 84​

When cats bite or scratch, they’re trying to tell you something. Ms. Wilbourn, a cat therapist, was a pioneer in the art of listening to them.


Listen to this article · 5:11 min Learn more


A woman with shoulder-length brown hair leans toward a gray cat. She is looking at him and the cat is looking straight ahead.

Carole Wilbourn, a pioneer in feline psychotherapy, having a session with a troubled cat named Finn in 2014. She said she had treated some 13,000 cats.
By Penelope Green
Jan. 8, 2025
Carole Wilbourn, a self-described cat therapist, who was known for her skill in decoding the emotional life of cats, as confounding as that would seem to be, died on Dec. 23 at her home in Manhattan. She was 84.
Her death was confirmed by her sister Gail Mutrux.
Ms. Wilbourn’s patients shredded sofas, toilet paper and romantic partners. They soiled rugs and beds. They galloped over their sleeping humans in the wee hours. They hissed at babies, dogs and other cats. They chewed electrical wires. They sulked in closets and went on hunger strikes.
They suffered from childhood trauma, low self-esteem, anxiety, depression, jealousy and just plain rage. And Ms. Wilbourn, who was self-taught — in college she had studied (human) psychology and majored in education — seemed particularly attuned to the inner workings of their furry minds. A minor Manhattan celebrity, she was often called the kitty Freud, or the mother of cat psychiatry.
Cats hate change, she often noted. Even a new slipcover on the sofa can undo them. Cats are selfish. Unlike dogs, who strive to please their masters, a cat strives to please itself. To mangle a cliché, happy cat, happy (human) life.


“A cat behaves badly when it’s trying to communicate,” Ms. Wilbourn told The Los Angeles Daily News in 1990. “It’s sending an SOS. It’s saying, ‘Please help me.’”
Ms. Wilbourn developed her specialty over a half-century after founding The Cat Practice, billed as Manhattan’s first cats-only hospital, in 1973 with Paul Rowan, a veterinarian. She said she was the first feline therapist in the country, a claim that is not known to have been disputed.
She was the author of six books, including “Cats on the Couch” (first published in 1982), which offered case studies to help cat lovers better understand their furry friends. She treated patients as far away as Australia and Turkey (by phone), and made house calls as far away as Maui.
“Cats have emotions,” she said. “They get happy and sad and frustrated, and, since I understand emotions in people, I understand them in cats.”


Image
A black-and-white photo of a man with long, sandy hair and wire-rimmed glasses, and a woman with long, dark hair and a nurse’s cap, both wearing white lab coats, examining a black cat. Behind them, another cat watches from on top of a high shelf.

Ms. Wilbourn and Dr. Rowan examining a patient in 1974. Their clinic, The Cat Practice, was said to be one of the first cat-only hospitals in the country.Credit...Bill Aller/The New York Times
Ms. Wilbourn estimated that she had treated 13,000 cats and claimed a success rate of 75 to 80 percent. Take Snoopy, who didn’t like to be held and played rough when he was, and who ran around in circles if he was over-excited. Sobriety, a 3-year-old tabby, scratched her own skin raw. Minina bit all visitors and had to be locked away during dinner parties. Ms. Wilbourn’s diagnosis? Single cat syndrome. The treatment? Another cat, preferably a kitten; lots of attention, but not to the kitten; and, in Sobriety’s case, Valium.


Ms. Wilbourn once treated a cat with Reiki energy-healing therapy after it had accidentally been run through the dryer.
Her go-to prescriptions also included New Age and classical music, recordings of whale songs and an abundance of treats, like catnip (a natural antidepressant, she pointed out). She also suggested canny behavior modifications by the humans in a cat’s life, like having a new romantic partner feed it.
She often recommended, in the days of landlines and answering machines, that humans call their pets and leave them cheerful messages. Her services did not come cheap: House-visits in Manhattan hovered at $400.
“If I lived anywhere besides a big city like New York,” she told The New York Times in 2004, “I’d be on food stamps.”
Image
The cover of a book with the title “The Inner Cat: A New Approach to Cat Behavior,” on a yellow background, above a photograph of two cats nuzzling each other.

Ms. Wilbourn was the author of six books, including “The Inner Cat: A New Approach to Cat Behavior.”Credit...Stein & Day Pub


Carole Cecile Engel was born on March 19, 1940, in the Flushing section of Queens, one of four children of Harriet (Greenwald) and Gustave Engel, a taxi driver. There were no cats in their Queens apartment, but the family did have a canary named Petey.
Carole graduated from Bayside High School and attended the State University of New York at Albany (now the University at Albany), before transferring to New York University, where she studied psychology and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in business education in 1964.
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A black and white photo of a woman sitting on a sofa and holding a Siamese cat while smiling and looking off to the side.

Ms. Wilbourn in 2016 with Orion 2, who survives her.Credit...Thomas Northcut
Her first cat was a part-Siamese named Oliver, whom she adopted through an ad in The Village Voice. She was working as a substitute teacher and a Playboy bunny before opening The Cat Practice with Dr. Rowan, whom she later married.
“She was very attuned to the animals, to their emotional states,” Dr. Rowan said in an interview. “It was very unusual for the time.” As a result, their business flourished.
An earlier marriage, to David Wilbourn, a photographer, ended in divorce, as did her marriage to Dr. Rowan. In addition to Ms. Mutrux, her sister, she is survived by Orion 2, a Siamese.


Ms. Wilbourn was a dog lover, too, and on occasion treated canines, though she never had a dog herself. But she had definite views about anti-cat people. In her experience, she said, some of those who claimed they were allergic to cats often just didn’t like them.
“A cat is a free spirit and will not be subservient,” she wrote in “The Inner Cat” (1978). “People who derive their gratification from giving commands that others must obey can be threatened by a cat. It’s hard to assert your sense of power over a cat.”
It is a nice story and it isn't that I don't like cats I do. But this doesn't pass the smell test. 13,000 treated cats. That would be one treated cat every other day since she was 4 years old until the end. 75 to 80% success rate? She is using something like a psychoanalytic approach with another species and getting those results? Very hard to believe.

I know cats can be trained as cat lover friends do so. Some quite ingeniously. I don't think they are as easily trained as dogs, but trainable they are.
 
There's the odd exception but if you confine the cat to the house you're going to have behaviour problems.

It's not natural for them. They need to go out to hunt, patrol and interact with other cats. Ideally they should be able to come and go as they please.
 
It is a nice story and it isn't that I don't like cats I do. But this doesn't pass the smell test. 13,000 treated cats. That would be one treated cat every other day since she was 4 years old until the end. 75 to 80% success rate? She is using something like a psychoanalytic approach with another species and getting those results? Very hard to believe.

I know cats can be trained as cat lover friends do so. Some quite ingeniously. I don't think they are as easily trained as dogs, but trainable they are.

As the quoted material indicates she ran a clinic with a partner, then “one patient every other day” seems an obvious flaw in your calculus.
 
Is it possible tweeters may be only partially defective?

My 2 cats have been able to drop my tower speakers to the floor several times, both. One of the speakers fell down 3 times (the other 1x)
My speakers are Focal Chorus 727, are 25kg each. At first I was even more worried for the cats then for the speakers itself, imagining a cat get a 25kg speaker on the head, it wouldn´t end well for the cat I suspect.

Now the issue: I hear clear distortion on certain frequencies, I suspect mid-high frequencies and I suspect the tweeters are not working properly although visually all seems well and they do work (I hear sound if I approach my ear closeby).
Still trying to figure out if the distortion is indeed caused by the tweeters. So far found nothing else that may explain the issue.
 
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Back in my single days, I was adopted by a neighbour's two young cats, who came into my and then our care later on. My feline soul-brother (oh yes indeedy!) came in with me one evening and when I turned the gear on, I forgot the high volume level when the preamp came out of muting. We both got blasted and Titchpuss fled. I apologised and I think he forgave me. Next evening, he came in, glaring at the speakers (as only cats can:)) as he stalked past them, but I'd learned my lesson and he never had to suffer that indignity again. His partner in crime (the baby of the pair) was only really interested in three things all his life, his 'biccie bowl,' lots of love-n-fuss and his bed... Both gave so much love to us both and my soul-brother helped me through some very sad as well as joyous times in his so-short eleven year life. I still shed tears for their loss to this day (one in 2003 and t'other in 2008).

Back to topic and after the 'incident,' Titch never went near the audio gear at all!!!
 
Is it possible tweeters may be only partially defective?

My 2 cats have been able to drop my tower speakers to the floor several items, both. One of the speakers fell down 3 times (the other 1x)
My speakers are Focal Chorus 727, are 25kg each. At first I was even more worried for the cats then for the speakers itself, imagining a cat get a 25kg speaker on the head, it wouldn´t end well for the cat I suspect.

Now the issue: I hear distortion on certain frequencies, I suspect mid-high frequencies and I suspect the tweeters are not working properly although visually all seems well and they do work (I hear sound if I approach my ear closeby).
Still trying to figure out if the distortion is indeed caused by the tweeters. So far found nothing else that may explain the issue.
It's possible, the voice coils can become partially deformed and cause problems that aren't totally obvious.

To check, you can use a measurement mic, take a close gated measurement with REW and look for spikes in THD. Or just run a sweep and see if you hear anything disordered.
 
As for cats, I've got 2 girl cats that are generally well behaved. One tore the surround on a sub by climbing on it, and bit though a headphone cable once, but that was when she was a kitten and she hasn't menaced my gear since then.
 
Cats evolved as solitary predators. They're selfish and eccentric, by human standards, because they're not social animals. They expect to be in control of what they do. Their only relationships in the wild are with their mother and their littermates. Some adult ferals live in groups, but many don't. I've found that our cats relate to us as either mom or litter mate. I've been the mom to several. Our current cat thinks of my wife as mom and me as a littermate. She prefers to sit on my wife and she tends to invite me to play more. Our former vet, who specialized in cats said, "Norm? There is no norm."
 
Cats evolved as solitary predators. They're selfish and eccentric, by human standards, because they're not social animals. They expect to be in control of what they do. Their only relationships in the wild are with their mother and their littermates. Some adult ferals live in groups, but many don't. I've found that our cats relate to us as either mom or litter mate. I've been the mom to several. Our current cat thinks of my wife as mom and me as a littermate. She prefers to sit on my wife and she tends to invite me to play more. Our former vet, who specialized in cats said, "Norm? There is no norm."
No sir! ALL of your feline companions have regarded you as STAFF (and tin openers if they have tinned 'wet' food) :D Nothing more, nothing less, Gawd bless 'em...

Happy daze, the day before my beloved speakers left my possession and a few days before I moved in with my then fiancé and now long suffering wife.

ATC, Titch & Me smaller.JPG
 
Cats evolved as solitary predators. They're selfish and eccentric, by human standards, because they're not social animals. They expect to be in control of what they do.
I lost my beautiful short haired black boy cat long ago. 17 years I had him. He was so smart and well behaved. He used to accompany me during night walks. Now that I'm poised to finish new custom built $00000 speakers, plus my 3 Rythmik F12 subs, do I dare seek another cat?
 
I lost my beautiful short haired black boy cat long ago. 17 years I had him. He was so smart and well behaved. He used to accompany me during night walks. Now that I'm poised to finish new custom built $00000 speakers, plus my 3 Rythmik F12 subs, do I dare seek another cat?
Not all cats are the same. Duh. I have a neutered female (mostly Birman) that I rescued from the yard as a kitten. She is completely house friendly.
 
is this what audio rich people only care about is a pack of immaterial pack of electronics and speakers ? how sad is that now
 
is this what audio rich people only care about is a pack of immaterial pack of electronics and speakers ? how sad is that now
Not now... My better half doesn't want 'pets' now for various reasons, but we have had neighbours' felines over the last few years that come to visit and to check in on us (and their property...), receive a huge fuss and stay a while, then off back to their home for grub and a snoozie :D The audio gear is never on when they visit and, apart from rubbing the corners of the speakers ("I don't know what they are, but they're MINE!!!), no other issues at all.
 
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I used to have a cat that liked to climb up the curtains. Right to the top and it would hang there, swinging, with its ears flat on its head and its eyes black.

It was a rented house and they weren't my curtains so I never got too stressed about it. It never went near the hi-fi.
 
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I had a lot of cats, currently I have 4, and that number will multiply, after all it's February. They are country alley cat's with privileges including getting in hause some more and some less. They are all different some by unique abilities even and definitely by character. Never had a problem with them messing with my gear audio or otherwise. After initial curiosity and putting their signature rubbing the cheaks they fast learn to ignore speakers. Had one which learned to crul up the walls and get in to my listening room on first floor trough window and to a speaker from there to a way to a floor but she never bumped it down. They regularly do wild things out in the garden (including claw sharpening and prefer my pore grapes for it, kittens run around like monkeys over them and surrounding fruit trees playing with each other later they don't want to climb if they really don't have to or with some purpose behind it) and probably that's the reason they behave good in the hause (much nicer and bigger playground outside).
First neighbour has a mean cat which even charge on them when he doesn't get his hotdog on time and gives them not plesent love bites. If he is mine we would have serious talk. Males are easier to get with in boss stile and with females that's not even wishful thinking. It's associated with their territorial fights and come alongs. It's always funny to see two almost equally strong males pretending to fight (as they know there won't be a winner at least without consequences) even for hours during a season.
 
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No sir! ALL of your feline companions have regarded you as STAFF (and tin openers if they have tinned 'wet' food) :D Nothing more, nothing less, Gawd bless 'em...

Happy daze, the day before my beloved speakers left my possession and a few days before I moved in with my then fiancé and now long suffering wife.

View attachment 427070
One of my mottos is, "Service to Cats, "It's not just a religion. It's a way of life." I don't speculate too much on cat emotion because it requires assuming that they work like humans. I think that although they probably don't experience gratitude, they get something from their humans. They mark them and sometimes groom them.
 
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