Born with multiple physical disabilities, Nekhidia Harris was given just three days to live.

But on Wednesday, the 24-year-old, who stands just over two-feet-tall, walked at her graduation from Medgar Evers College, according to a new report.

“I feel so excellent,” Harris told ABC New York. “After the hard work, and sleepless nights sometimes, all-nighters, it feels really good that I accomplished my Bachelor’s [degree] in social work.”

It was a day doctors predicted would never come for Harris, who was born with brittle bones and other health issues requiring multiple surgeries over the years.

But Harris keeps looking toward the future and will soon embark on a Masters program at York College in Queens.

“Use my brain as my height, and I’ve stuck with that,” the Edward R. Murrow High School alumna told the network. “And I surely have used my brain as my height.”

Harris, who goes by the nickname Nikki, is also one of the founders of the Brooklyn-based Harris Family Vision Foundation, which helps underprivileged children.

“I like to help people, and especially children,” said Harris, who is about the size of a toddler. “I also have a voice, and I love children. They gravitate to me, so I want to help them in every way I can.”

Her father, Michael Harris, said she isn’t treated any differently — because of her giant personality.

“No one has shunned her,” Michael told ABC. “Nobody treats her differently, because they see her as tall as they are.”

Harris suffers from a disability that hasn’t yet been diagnosed, according to a 2012 article from Jamaica Observer.