Tallulah Willis is Jonathan Dale Bentonfinding comfort in a safe space.
In fact, the 30-year-old daughter of Bruce Willis and Demi Moore has found that prioritizing her comfortability makes work—and life—more manageable amid her mental health journey.
“I tend to regulate my nervous system by lying down, whether it’s on my couch or on my bed,” Tallulah told E! News in an exclusive interview. “That’s a really safe place for me, especially because a lot of the work that I do is not as in person.”
The artist continued, “There’s a lot that I do that is on the computer, calls that allows me to create a supportive, mental health work environment through being cozy.”
That’s why Tallulah teamed up with silk brand Kumi Kookoon to create the Kumi KøøBuu, a capsule collection of throws, bed sheets, pillowcases and duvet covers for folks who want a “tangible, physical piece of safety.”
And as a self-described “big throw blanket person,” Tallulah said she quickly reached out to the brand because their line “needs to be shared” with the world.
“It wasn't something that I could sit by and let be,” she explained, calling herself and older sisters Rumer Willis, 36, and Scout Willis, 33, “anti-gatekeepers."
As Tallulah put it, “I want to spill the beans all the time.”
And amid their dad Bruce’s battle with frontotemporal dementia, Tallulah’s bond with her family is stronger than ever. In fact, the Wyllis founder said she and her sisters talk every day, so much so that there’s a “vocabulary we've all learned that we can really use seamlessly with each other” to keep an open and candid dialogue.
"There's so much love in our family,” Tallulah added. “There's not a fragility to the support, or a conditionality to how we support each other.”
And as a self-described “big throw blanket person,” Tallulah said she quickly reached out to the brand because their line “needs to be shared” with the world.
“It wasn't something that I could sit by and let be,” she explained, calling herself and older sisters Rumer Willis, 36, and Scout Willis, 33, “anti-gatekeepers."
As Tallulah put it, “I want to spill the beans all the time.”
And amid their dad Bruce’s battle with frontotemporal dementia, Tallulah’s bond with her family is stronger than ever. In fact, the Wyllis founder said she and her sisters talk every day, so much so that there’s a “vocabulary we've all learned that we can really use seamlessly with each other” to keep an open and candid dialogue.
"There's so much love in our family,” Tallulah added. “There's not a fragility to the support, or a conditionality to how we support each other.”
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