Five years on from having to learn how to walk again, Freya Lewis is now preparing for a charity 10k.
A teenager who learned to walk again after being injured in the Manchester Arena bomb has raised more than £67,000 for the hospital that saved her life.
Freya Lewis was wounded in the blast on 22 May 2017. Her best friend Nell Jones, 14, was one of the 22 killed.
Freya, who is now 19, said it was still “really hard” to imagine five years had gone by without Nell, but reflected on just “how far she had come” since then.
“I am happy and healthy for the first time in a very long time,” she added.
On Sunday Freya will take part in the Greater Manchester 10k, her second charity run in the city.
The bomb left Freya, from Holmes Chapel, Cheshire, was left with multiple injuries, fractures and burns.
She spent three months in a wheelchair.
“I have changed in more ways that you can imagine,” she told BBC North West Tonight ahead of the fifth anniversary on Sunday.
“I am grateful for the outlook I have in life as I had to learn at 14 years old that you really only do live once.
“Things can change in one night so just be grateful for those around you.”
“Nell was such a massive part of my life and to have her not part of it is still so odd,” said Freya.
“I’m definitely on my way to healing and I think I still keep the memory of her alive in everything I do.”
Months after learning to walk again in 2018, Freya signed up to do the 2.5km Junior Great Manchester Run.
Since the attack Freya, joined by her family and friends, has raised money for Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital, where she was treated after the bomb.
To date Freya and her family have raised more than £67,000.
Recalling that first charity run, she said: “It was terrifying to think, ‘how am I supposed to run?’
“Thankfully, now I am a lot fitter and healthier.”
Freya, who is now a first-year acting and performance student in London, will run the 10k event on Sunday alongside nine of her closest friends and family members.
A one-minute applause to honour the victims and survivors will start each wave of the race.
Freya said: “10k is still absolutely horrendous for me for someone who is not into exercise, nor who likes running.
“I am extremely nervous, but this time, more than anything, I am really excited.”
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