Bruce Willis’ Daughter Rumer Says She Still Takes Baths With Her Sisters

Sisters Tallulah Willis, Rumer Willis and Scout LaRue Willis.

Bruce Willis and Demi Moore’s eldest daughter, Rumer Willis, is revealing just how close her family is.

While appearing on Tuesday’s episode of the “What in the Winkler” podcast, Rumer, 36, shared that she and her sisters “all still take baths together,” but she doesn’t think it’s “weird.”

“And that’s just the kind of house that I grew up in,” she explained to host Zoe Winkler Reinis. “People might think that that’s crazy and weird, but I don’t.”

Moore and the “Die Hard” actor welcomed Rumer in 1988, and the former couple also share daughters Scout, 33, and Tallulah, 31.

The bizarre admission came as Rumer told Reinis, 45, that she’s been co-sleeping with her daughter Louetta since her birth in 2023. Rumer added that she will also still sleep in bed with her mom as well.

“Honestly, I hope Lou will, like, still sleep in bed with me when she’s my age,” Rumer continued, noting, “I still sleep in bed with my mom, and I don’t think it’s weird.”

Sisters Tallulah Willis, Rumer Willis and Scout LaRue Willis.

MICHAEL TRAN via Getty Images

Reinis, a mom of three, shared that she has the same sleeping arrangement with one of her children, telling Rumer that her 7-year-old still sleeps with her and her husband, Rob Reinis.

“It really just depends on who your kid is,” Reinis said. “My middle would never. If I get in his bed, he’s like, ‘I’m good, Mom.’ My youngest, his attachment is different, and it showed in a different way. He needs to sleep with us, and I know that about him, and I know it won’t last forever.”

Elsewhere in the episode, Rumer opened up about why she co-sleeps with her child despite facing criticism for it.

“I always think about it as, imagine if you took a baby gorilla or a dog when it was two weeks old or three months old and had it sleep in a different room than [its] mom,” she said. “Everyone would look at you like you were crazy. But yet we’re like, ‘Oh no, that kid can sleep through the night. [They have] to fend for themselves, got to learn how to self-soothe.’ They can’t even feed themselves!”

Rumer added: “By the way, we as adults don’t even know how to self-soothe. We call a friend. People drink wine, people do drugs, people eat an entire tub of ice cream.”

Bed-sharing with a baby is strongly discouraged by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) due to the increased risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, among other health concerns.

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“The AAP understands and respects that many parents choose to routinely bed share for a variety of reasons, including facilitation of breastfeeding, cultural preferences, and belief that it is better and safer for their infant,” the association states. “However, based on the evidence, we are unable to recommend bed sharing under any circumstances.”

Check out Rumer’s appearance on the “What in the Winkler” podcast here.

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