Just before Leslie's sudden death, she had exchanged texts with Caitlin, telling her she felt stressed about money, having recently sustained an injury that meant she had to take time off from her restaurant job.
Caitlin, who reassured her, added: “I got a call from my aunt, who lived with Mum at the time saying she’d found her about 15 minutes later, collapsed and unresponsive.
“She’d died of a sudden heart attack. I didn’t understand, I’d spoken to her just before.
“I don’t know for sure if it was caused by stress. It's not the kind of thing you ever imagine would take a life.”
In the wake of her mother’s unexpected passing, Caitlin had a number of tribute tattoos, including a clock displaying the exact time of her death, a rose to mark her love of gardening and some of her handwriting.
Then in late 2017, Caitlin’s husband Shane, 29 – a tattoo artist – was researching new ideas for his designs, when he came across soundwave inkings.
A way of making tattoos both visual and audio, they work by converting sound clips into printed soundwaves, which can then be played using an app called Skin Motion.
Intrigued, Shane registered to become a certified artist and, soon after, created his first inking.
Impressed by the results, in January 2017, Caitlin had one too.
“It’s really special that it was Shane that did it,” she said. “It’s like a gift from both him and Mum.”
Before Shane could tattoo her, Caitlin scoured Facebook to find a suitable piece of audio.
Not a great one for videoing events, initially she struggled.