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Bruce Willis And Demi Moore's Youngest Daughter Tallulah Willis Reveals Her Struggles Before Seeking Treatment; Feels Better About Herself After Rehab

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In an interview with Teen Vouge Magazine, Bruce Willis and Demi Moore's youngest daughter reveals her struggles before seeking treatment.

She begins that her troubles started when she moved from Idaho to Hollywood. "I spent my early childhood on our ranch in Idaho, I hadn't processed the full extent of my family's fame until I moved to Los Angeles and started third grade," she said.

"Then, suddenly, I didn't think I deserved what I had grown up with, and I remember thinking I couldn't have problems, so I kept everything bottled up inside."

Her problems had continued when she hits puberty, and the young Willis has said her weight dropped down to 95 pounds after reading negative comments about her looks on the internet. She admits that she wasn't affected by these cyberbullies, but instead she became her "own worst critic." While growing up and dealing with her problems she also developed an eating disorder and started partying too much. The young Willis has said her weight dropped down to 95 pounds after reading these cyberbullies.

Bruce Willis and Demi Moore's youngest daughter adds that her depression have worsen when she was in college. And her sister Scout stepped in and "forced" her to face her issues.

The 20-year-old fashion blogger then checked in herself in a celebrity treatment facility at The Meadows in Arizona in July for alcohol and cocaine abuse and the star spent 45 days in the rehab.

After seeking treatment, Tallulah opened up that she's now ready to face her problems and she's slowly getting by.

She said: "I'm now 20 years old, and I can say that I'm getting to that place where I'm starting to feel OK with myself, bit by bit. It's not night and day - it's not like now I completely love myself and I have no problems. That isn't how it works. But there are the starting points of that, and that's really exciting. I'm growing every day and breaking old patterns. "It's not about the easy way out for me. I want to be brave and don't want to let anyone keep me locked up in a tower because I'm scared. If you're bullied in school, should you stay home? No. You go to school in your best outfit and look like a million bucks and own it."

Tallulah's full interview will be published in February issue of Teen Vogue , and out in stores on January 13.

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