amina p. lee

Licensed Psychotherapist

Hello!

Amina P. Lee has known since she was young that she was built to show up for other people. Not in the way people say it on a resume, but rather, in the way that actually costs you something. Coaching someone else's kids on a Saturday. Sitting with a family navigating a system that wasn't designed to help them. Finding the resource no one told them existed and putting it in their hands. Advocating for people whose voices weren't being heard and not because they had nothing to say, but because no one was listening. She made the decision to become a social worker over thirty years ago, and she has never once reconsidered it.

Amina is a seasoned psychotherapist at Healing Pathways Foundation with over three decades of experience serving diverse populations. She holds a Master of Social Work (MSW) and a Bachelor of Arts in Social Work, and she brings both into her clinical practice with a grounding that only comes from doing this work long enough to know what actually helps and what just looks good on paper. She conducts comprehensive clinical assessments, provides individual therapy, mentors youth, and supervises MSW and BSW students. She is shaping the next generation of social workers with the same care she brings to every client who walks through her door.

Her clinical approach draws from Client-Centered Social Work, Task-Centered Social Work, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, and Motivational Interviewing, but she doesn't treat modalities like a checklist. She listens first. She learns what the person in front of her is actually carrying. And then she chooses the approach that fits their life, not the one that fits a treatment manual. She has worked with enough people, across enough years and enough challenges, to know that there is no single method that works for everyone and that the most important therapeutic tool in the room is the willingness to truly hear someone's story.

As a member of the Healing Pathways Foundation team, Amina represents something the Foundation was built to protect: the kind of clinical care that is grounded in compassion, delivered with dignity, and rooted in decades of real experience — not theory, not trends, but the steady, unglamorous practice of helping people build the skills they need to navigate their lives with less weight and more clarity.

She describes her work simply: she helps people create a bag of tools they can carry with them. Not a cure. Not a quick fix. A bag of tools that are practical, personal, and built together . Thirty years in, she is still filling bags. Still listening. Still showing up.