Photo

Anaïs Jin Lee

Age Group Served
adolescents
adults
elders
Therapy Format
individuals
couples
families
Treatment Focus
burnout, chronic-illness, codependency, divorce, emotion-regulation, family-conflict, grief, lgbtq-related-issues, marital-concerns, personal-growth, racial-identity, relational-concerns, suicidal-ideation, traumatic-grief, relationship-issues, life-transitions
Types of Therapy
Attachment-based/Relational Therapy
Clinical Supervision
Eclectic / Generalist
Emotionally-Focused Therapy
Family Systems
Interpersonal
LGBTQ+ Affirming
Trauma Informed Care
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Narrative Therapy
Gottman Method
Can Prescribe Medication: No
Offers Sliding Scale: yes
Accepting New Therapy Fund Clients: No
Last modified: May 23, 2026

Anaïs Jin Lee

In-Person / Virtual: in-person, tele
License Number(s): LEEA2507030TCF
States / Provinces Served: Quebec
Ethnicity: Mongolian, Taiwanese
Racial Identity / Culture: asian-canadian, second-generation-asian-immigrant
Languages Spoken: English, French, Mandarin
Sex/Gender: Female

Anaïs is a Psychotherapist and a Couple and Family Therapist with over ten years of experience in nursing as a Nurse Clinician, Advanced Practice Nurse, and teacher, particularly in palliative and end-of-life care, community health, and psychiatry. With a bachelor’s and master’s degree in nursing, she went on to specialize in systemic psychotherapy by completing a master’s degree in couple and family therapy at McGill University.
She uses an eclectic approach with an attachment-based and trauma-informed lens, grounded in a systemic frame. She integrates Narrative Therapy, Emotionally Focused Therapy and third-wave Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. An anti-oppressive lens is essential to her practice. She strives to offer a culturally safe, inclusive, and affirming space for people of all genders, sexualities, and relationship orientations.

She works with individuals, couples, and families facing challenges related to relationships and family dynamics, grief, end-of-life issues, and chronic illnesses, as well as life transitions and adapting to change. She also supports people navigating the realities of immigration, acculturation, and intercultural experiences and relationships.