By all accounts Demi Moore and Bruce Willis were fine, loving parents to their three daughters together: Rumer, 28, Scout, 25, and Tallulah, 23.

The one-time Hollywood power couple also kept things friendly after they divorced in 2000 and moved on to new partners. In Moore’s case, she picked up with 16-years-younger actor Ashton Kutcher, who was her husband for eight years.

As if to show their bonus family solidarity, Moore, Kutcher and Willis often turned up together at red carpet events, with all three girls in tow, everyone looking happy and accepting.

Still, it can’t have been easy for the Willis girls growing up in the fish bowl of Hollywood celebrity, even if they had money and privilege. That lifestyle apparently took its toll on the sisters as all three have gone public in the past 10 days with their various battles with obsessive, self-destructive behavior.

Rumer, an actress and singer who won Season 20 of “Dancing With the Stars,” started things off on July 1 when she took to Instagram to announce she was celebrating six months of sobriety.

“It’s not something I planned on but after the long journey of getting here I can honestly say I have never been more proud of myself in my entire life,” she wrote in a post that has garnered 19,000 “likes” so far.

Then on Thursday, middle sister Scout shared a song she wrote called “Goodbye” accompanied with a post that read, “Last month on June 17 marked one year of being full present with ma self, no filters, no chemical relaxation, no short cuts. I am meeting the best version of myself every day.”

Finally, on Friday, the youngest Willis sister revealed that she had overcome both problems with alcohol and an eating disorder. Her post is accompanied by a throwback photo of a noticeably thinner Tallulah with a rolled cigarette in her mouth and a beer can in her hand.

She said that three years ago she had been a “malnourished string bean with aches that echoed throughout my soul.” She said she didn’t heed “internal cries” to tend her most “blistered and deep wounds.”

“I did not value myself, my life or my body and as such I was constantly punishing for not being enough,” she wrote. But with the help of “powerful human beings,” she said she’s found her way back and has had her life “gifted back to me.”

She said she posted the photo of herself at her most sick and unhappy to remind herself that this person is never far away. “I love the girl in this picture, I cry for her and I mourn her lost years,” Tallulah added.”She is inside of me always and I must never let her slip too far.”

It seems like the Willis girls are supporting one another in their individual journeys, with Rumer praising Tallulah for being clean and sober. “The woman I have seen you become in the last 3 years has me in awe of you. You inspire me everyday.”

Rumer added: “The way you have learned to love and accept all of the parts of yourself that you used to hide away is one of the most beautiful transformations I have had the honor to witness.”

Judging by their posts, the girls all seem close to one another as well as to their parents. On Mother’s Day, Scout posted this childhood photo of her with her sisters and their mother Moore, whom she praised as “the strongest, most magical, most intelligent, integrity rooted woman I know.”