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‘Guys feel guilty’: emotional demons to slay after Fort McMurray wildfire

WATCH ABOVE: Fort McMurray residents began to return home on June 1, 2016, nearly one month after more than 80,000 people were forced out by a wildfire dubbed "the beast."

The man who led the battle against the wildfire dubbed “The Beast” says many Fort McMurray firefighters are now wrestling a different set of demons.

Fire Chief Darby Allen says the emotional toll is hitting home for the crews who worked non-stop for days to beat back the ferocious wildfire that breached the northeastern Alberta city two months ago.

“They went through one of the most significant events that any firefighter could ever go through,” Allen said in a recent interview at Fire Hall No. 1 in downtown Fort McMurray.

READ MORE: Fort McMurray wildfire: ‘We expect weeks, if not months, fighting this fire’

Counselling services have been offered from the beginning, but Allen said it’s important that help is available for the long haul.

The blaze was so tough to subdue that Allen has likened it to a wild animal.

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“It did seem to have a brain. It did seem to want to do things that we didn’t want it to do. And whatever plan that we came up with, it seemed to come up with its own plan and fight us at every level.”

READ MORE: Image of firefighters resting after saving homes in Fort McMurray goes viral

In the end, about 10 per cent of the town was destroyed, with the majority of the Abasand, Beacon Hill and Waterways neighbourhoods reduced to rubble.

Now, one of the toughest emotions firefighters are battling is guilt, said Allen.

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“You can’t put all of the fire out and sometimes you have to give up an area to go on to another area,” he said.

“Sometimes you have to make decisions where you’re going to lose certain properties to save other properties.”

Many firefighters are beating themselves up because they feel like they could have done more. Some watched their own homes burn, but went back to work.

“The reality is we couldn’t have done more,” said Allen. “My job has been to reassure them that they’ve done everything they could and I do truly believe that there were some incredible efforts to save as many properties as we did.”

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READ MORE: Fort McMurray firefighter forced to watch as fire consumes his own home

In some cases, the call to pull firefighters out of some areas was a matter of life and death, Allen said.

“There were some areas — Abasand, Beacon Hill — where we were fighting the fire in those areas for long periods of time and in the end we had to pull out of those areas because of the significance of the fire and the overwhelming nature of the fire,” he said.

“We had to pull our resources out of there because they were literally not going to survive if they stayed there,” Allen said. “Guys feel guilty about that. They wanted to stay and they couldn’t stay.”

Watch below: Aerial footage of the destruction in Abasand and Beacon Hill

Click to play video: 'Fort McMurray wildfire: Aerial footage of the destruction in Abasand and Beacon Hill'
Fort McMurray wildfire: Aerial footage of the destruction in Abasand and Beacon Hill

In the city generally, it’s a tough time emotionally for residents, said Mayor Melissa Blake.

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“You have a bit of a honeymoon period off the get-go and that’s because of that incredible support and human compassion that came through loud and clear from everywhere we were in Alberta or Canada or beyond,” she said in a recent interview.

“The next stage, though, is that when you come back into your community and you see the loss and destruction, you go into the valley of death almost, where you just go down into the depths of despair, depression, insomnia.”

IN PHOTOS: Fort McMurray residents return to destruction on Day 2 of re-entry

Alberta Health Services did close to 13,000 counselling sessions between May 10 and June 28, said spokesman Kerry Williamson.

“I know that at times the numbers were upwards of sort of 300 a day and then other days were a little bit quieter,” he said. “But it’s been consistent that we’ve seen relatively high numbers throughout.”

Blake is expecting milestones and anniversaries to be fraught for residents, but eventually things won’t be so raw.

“I just don’t know how long it’s going to take to come out the other side.”

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