Psychiatry

Psychotherapy

Psychoanalysis

Our suffering

is the first step

on a

profound journey.

 

Whether you are suffering from depression, anxiety, grief, or another ailment, your symptoms carry with them a meaning. When we honor our symptoms and become curious of what underlies them, we are led on a profound journey that both enriches and deepens our lives.

I can provide psychiatric medication treatment as well as psychotherapy. While medications can be helpful at lessening our symptoms, the process of psychotherapy aims at deep and lasting change.

Patients that typically benefit from the treatments that I provide are those that suffer from symptoms such as depression, anxiety, lack of fulfillment in their relationships and career, inner conflicts, negative thoughts, obsessions, and self-doubt. They may have difficulty with finding contentment and meaning, living their lives authentically, setting boundaries, accessing their creativity, or with maintaining their confidence and self-esteem. They can struggle with perfectionism, shame, or a sense of wanting something more from life. They may have bodily stress symptoms such as stomach upset, headaches, fatigue, insomnia, neck tension or jaw pain, and so on.

Rachel Cuenot, M.D. is a board certified psychiatrist. She earned her bachelor’s degree in philosophy from The Ohio State University, where she had experience as a fitness trainer as well as with nutrition research. She completed medical school and psychiatry residency training at Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine. In accordance with her conviction of the importance of cultivating meaning and depth in each human life, she is working on becoming a psychoanalyst through the Cincinnati Psychoanalytic Institute.

Dr. Cuenot currently has a psychiatry and psychotherapy practice in Centerville, Ohio, where she emphasizes a specialized, in depth form of psychotherapy. She also has an interest in psychoneuroimmunology, and enjoys working with patients who, along with psychiatric conditions, have concurrent chronic medical illness, such as obesity and metabolic syndrome, allergic and autoimmune disease, chronic pain syndromes, and other health conditions. She honors the mind-body connection as well as the various ways in which how we lead our lives can contribute to physical and mental illness.

 
 

Dr. Rachel Cuenot, M.D.

Psychiatrist