I'd advise against. When my first cat fell from the window, my dad brought him back for me to see him before he got ready to take him to the vet (we didn't really know what happened, the cat just disappeared and my dad went to look in front of the building not really believing he'll be there. He found the cat by pure accident because he meowed as my dad walked passed him). While my dad was getting ready, I saw my cat panting and clearly in pain. I'm sort of glad that I saw him, but that image haunts me to this day. I was 10 years old when this happened and I still remember that image and not in a pleasant way. The cat died while on the way to the vet (it was already too late, we didn't notice that he's gone for at least two hours when he already fell).Headsprouter said:Thanks. Now I'm troubled with a decision of whether to retrieve the box she's contained in at her grave site to check if it really is her. If that is the case, I'm terrified I'll want to undo my decision as soon as I find out, considering the taboos of digging up graves and such, and then there's seeing the rotting corpse of my beloved cat.
I'm interested in confirming, though, and being able to lay eyes upon and touch her one last time.
I was devastated by the cat's death, I cried almost every day at random points. In school, at home, at the friend's house... It took me months to get a grip and getting a new cat helped (especially since it was from the same people, so my new cat was technically a brother to the one before, because same parents). I'm sorry for your loss and I definitely understand what you're going through.
Either way, seeing them one last time, and in that state is probably not going to make you feel better. Maybe it would be beneficial to be 100% sure it's your cat, but you probably won't like what you'll see. Remember her for how she was in her life, instead of having the last glimpse of her dead body.