Hi, I’m Rochelle Marecheau, LMFT.

This isn’t just another private practice —it’s a reflection of what I believe in, quality mental health care that sees you as a whole person not a diagnosis.

Whether it is childhood trauma, feeling misunderstood, or navigating romance without a roadmap, I believe caring for a person’s mental health or intimate relationships goes beyond just learning skills.


Educational Path

Rochelle's path into therapy started with a question a lot of us sit with: why do we carry what we carry, and how much of it was ever really ours to begin with? She studied Psychology with a minor in Sociology at Kennesaw State University — a combination that taught her to see people not in isolation, but inside the families, cultures, and systems that shape who we become. She went on to earn a Master's in Family Therapy at Mercer University's School of Medicine, where she trained in the relational and systemic approaches that still anchor her work today.

What that means for you: she doesn't just look at your symptoms or your habits. She looks at the whole picture — your story, your relationships, the world you've had to navigate — and helps you make sense of it without judgment.

Trainings

  • Externship and Core Skills for Emotionally Focused Therapy

  • Gottman Method Couples Therapy Level 1 and Level 2

Professional Standard

  • American Association for Marriage and Family Therapists

  • Georgia Association for Marriage and Family Therapists

  • Hippocratic Oath

  • Georgia Composite Board of Professional Counselors, Social Workers, and Marriage and Family Therapists



Therapeutic Approach

Rochelle begins from a simple belief: you are not your problems. So much of what people carry — the patterns they've come to call flaws, the parts of themselves they've learned to hide — began as something that once offered protection. Her role isn't to fix anyone, because no one is broken. It's to help clients see themselves more fully and gently rewrite the stories they've been telling about who they are.

Her perspective has been shaped by years of work across systems — from inpatient psychiatric admissions to hospice care to private practice. Walking alongside people in their most acute moments, at the end of life, and through the quieter, ongoing work of healing has taught her how resilient the human spirit is, and how much meaning lives inside even the hardest chapters of a person's story.

Rochelle draws on narrative therapy to help clients separate themselves from the struggles that have come to define them, and to recognize the strength, resourcefulness, and meaning already living within their stories. Alongside this, emotionally focused therapy helps uncover what lies beneath those patterns — the longing for safety, connection, and belonging that shapes how we show up in our relationships and in our relationship with ourselves.

At the center of it all is the person in the room: their humanity, their history, their wisdom. Rochelle meets each client with warmth, curiosity, and deep respect, trusting that they are the expert on their own life. Together, she and her clients move toward a relationship with themselves that feels more compassionate, more honest, and more whole.

Simple ideas

Through every step, we're focused on staying true to your values and making space for thoughtful, lasting work.

Lasting impact

Work grounded in compassion, empathy, cultural awareness, and a commitment to helping clients create meaningful change in their lives.