Bindi Irwin has been given a "second chance at life" after undergoing surgery for endometriosis.
The 25-year-old conservationist — who has a two-year-old daughter Grace with husband Chandler Powell — had suffered from the reproductive condition, which sees uterine tissue grow outside the uterus, for more than a decade.
After undergoing life-changing surgery, she can "see the world in a new way" as she balances motherhood and filming TV shows at her family's zoo.
She told Fox News Digital: "My life now looks completely different than it did before I had my surgery. Over the 10 years that I was really battling with endometriosis without knowing it, I would get progressively worse every week and in the end, before my surgery, I was barely able to get out of bed. And now on the other side of surgery, I mean, I'm going for daily zoo walks with my family.
"I'm able to go to our management meetings and check up on our animals and do the filming work that I love and play with my daughter. And it is just so wonderful. I feel like I see the world in a new way now. I'm able to actually do things again. It does feel like a second chance at life."
Bindi — who is the daughter of late Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin and his widow Terri — admitted in August she wasn't sure whether or not to discuss her health publicly, but she felt like she had a responsibility to try and help other women by sharing her story.
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In a lengthy Instagram post, she wrote: "For 10 years I've struggled with insurmountable fatigue, pain and nausea. Trying to remain a positive person and hide the pain has been a very long road.
"These last 10 years have included many tests, doctors' visits, scans, etc. A doctor told me it was simply something you deal with as a woman and I gave up entirely, trying to function through the pain.
"I didn't find answers until a friend @lesliemosier helped set me on a path of regaining my life. I decided to undergo surgery for endometriosis.
"Every part of my life was getting torn apart because of the pain. To cut a long story short, they found 37 lesions, some very deep and difficult to remove, a chocolate cyst.
"@seckinmd's first words to me when I was in recovery were, 'How did you live with this much pain?' Validation for years of pain is indescribable."
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