🔥 Dr. Psiquiatra bursts with the unmistakable attitude of Gloria Trevi, now super-charged by the cumbia groove of Los Ángeles Azules. The narrator is a young woman who refuses to be boxed in: her family, her teacher and even a psychiatrist label her “loca,” but she insists she is simply desperate for freedom and love. Each verse shows her rebelling against expectations—storming out of class, hurling household ornaments, fantasizing about leaping from a fifth-floor window—only to mock the authority figures who try to “cure” her.
Behind the playful chaos lies a sharp social commentary. The song laughs at how society pathologizes rebellious women, turning non-conformity into a medical problem. With lines like “yo soy Julieta… me vuelvo loba,” she claims heroic, even mythical, identities for herself and demands the right to live on her own terms. In short, Dr. Psiquiatra is an energetic anthem of self-assertion, feminist defiance and sardonic humor—all wrapped in an irresistible cumbia beat that makes you want to dance while you shout “¡No estoy loca!”