An intermission like they do in India would be nice for long movies. I hate having to get up to go to the bathroom mid-movie and miss a critical scene.
This depends on the state the patient is in. Most states require the therapist to be licensed in the state the patient is in, but there are exceptions.
For instance, many states allow an out-of-state licensed therapist (via telehealth or otherwise) to practice in their state for a limited period of time, typically 20 days.
During covid, many states (and the federal government) temporarily lifted restrictions on therapists operating in states they aren't licensed in as well. I don't know how many, if any, of those states have put the restrictions back in place.
And there are often different rules about when a patient has an established relationship with a licensed therapist but moves out of state.
To really know, you need to check with your own state's licensing department.
I worked for LLNL. Got to see the NIF. Super cool projects. You should seriously consider it, however they also work on bombs and other things that are destructive to society.
Come join us at Upmortem. We're working on an AI slack bot. We cut all the nonsense out. No stand-ups. No people on call. Just pure development. Email me at [redacted]
Starting a startup doing AI CEO as a Service. It'll begin as a personal assistant to everyone inside slack and expand out from there. We're building the first AI run company. It's called UpMortem. Watch out for us. Our first product will be free, giving you access to GPT-3 inside slack. Ping me if you want to be kept up to date about it at raj@upmortem.com.