Yes. The firefighters are truly heros. I was listening to a NPR piece last night and they were talking about the PTSD that firefighters are now having to deal with. It used to be that the sorts of horrible fires and the related horrors (burned bodies of humans, livestock, pets, and the utter destruction of people's entire lives via their homes and possessions) happened maybe once in a firefighter's career.
There's a quasi military aspect to all this. It's like fighting in a war zone, both the endurance (they work 24 hour shifts and have rather makeshift shelters to return to between bouts of fighting fires), and the horrors.
But in recent years, these kinds of fires have become more and more of a regular occurrence. So a firefighter who might have once had to deal with only one terrible fire, like the Camp Fire that is burning in Paradise, CA, now has to deal with multiple such fires in just a few short years. They deal with anger, and all kinds of related stresses that are parallel to those experienced by military veterans who return from the Afghan campaign. They've been sending chaplains and emotional support groups to the fires to help the firefighters deal with this, but still, besides risking life and limb, they now have the emotional fallout of the experience to contend with. We owe these guys more than a debt of gratitude.
I have to deal with the unhealthy inconvenience of curtailing exercise and wearing a mask, but that's nothing compared to these guys who must deal with all kinds of horrors and at a level of intensity I don't even want to try to imagine.