Amy Schumer is feeling pretty.
The Kinda Pregnant star shared a candid photo of herself that she labeled "no filter, no filler," days after revealing that comments about her appearance online last year led to her Cushing's syndrome diagnosis.
Amy reposted the selfie onto her grid, writing, "What can I say It was a good night."
The 43-year-old's post came three days after explaining that comments on social media about her "puffier" face weren't all ill-intentioned.
"When I was going through, I guess it was like a year ago, and the internet really came for me after doing a bunch of press, and I was like, 'OK, everybody like, relax,'" she told host Alex Cooper on the Jan. 22 episode of Call her Daddy. "But then doctors were chiming in in the comments."
Amy went on to explain that she noticed medical professionals expressing genuine concern, saying, "'No, no, we think something's really up. Like, your face looks so crazy and we think something's up.'"
The Trainwreck actress—who shares son Gene, 5, with husband Chris Fischer—recalled how these doctors she had never met were accurate in their hypotheses about her health.
"And I'm like, I'm like, wait, I'm getting trolled by doctors?" Amy said. "They were like, 'We think you have something called Cushing and it's like, about spiking cortisol, about cortisol levels and steroids, injection whatever.'"
When the comedian learned that Cushing syndrome can be caused from high-dose steroid injections—which she had been getting to treat scars from a breast reduction and her C-section—she realized they were onto something. Their suspicions were confirmed when Amy was diagnosed with Cushing last February, right before she started filming Kinda Pregnant in March.
"Right before we started rolling was when I learned I had this condition," she explained, "and that I had something called moon face."
While she was initially scared she had the version of Cushing where "you could die," which led her to be "really down" on herself during that time, she ultimately learned that she had a type that she could overcome.
"So anyway, I got rid of [it]," Amy said. “Like, it just has to work itself out."
Those sentiments echoed what she said when she initially shared the news of her diagnosis with the public a year ago.
"Finding out I have the kind of Cushing that will just work itself out and I'm healthy," Amy said at the time, "was the greatest news imaginable."