
What Happened to Jenny Hill After Satanic Ritual Abuse? Learn More Details About Jenny, From Pre-earthly Life to Her Passing.
1
104

As Jenny’s sometimes therapist, friend and biographer, I’ve tried to respectfully traverse her traumatic life in her biography “Twenty Two Faces” – and learned a lot about how to live life in peace.
Jenny had an extremely difficult existence with day after day of traumatic abuse inflicted on her that no one, let alone a child, should have to endure. Through it all I found Jenny to be very forgiving – even of her perpetrators. Her favorite book was Spencer W. Kimball’s “The Miracle of Forgiveness.” When I asked Jenny why, she said she didn’t want to carry the burden of hating others around with her. Forgiving those who did her wrong set her free.
You see, Jenny felt her traumatic life served a higher purpose – that was connected to a covenant she had made with God before she was born. The number seven had significance in the Holy Bible and was not without precedence during her extraordinary life. The root of the Hebrew word for seven (sheva) was identical to the Hebrew verb that meant “to take an oath” and connected to covenant making.
Jenny believed that before coming to earth she was given a vision of what she would endure while living here and she had covenanted with God to take on those challenges – for the purpose of serving other Satanic Ritual Abuse Victims and Survivors.
An indication of that divine promise was made known the evening before Jenny’s birth. Her Uncle Jim called his sister-in-law Mercy saying he had a dream the night before that Mercy would give birth on the seventh day of the month to a girl who would weigh seven pounds, seven ounces. Jim was told this was a special child who would do important things on this earth.
Just as in her uncle’s dream, Jenny was born the next day on Feb. 7 1959 at seven pounds, seven ounces. And, that covenant number of seven continued to mark her life.
Healing from DID is a complex and long process, but Heavenly Father told Jenny how to do it at the tender age of seven even before she realized she carried traumatic memories of abuse and their accompanying multiple personalities.
By age seven Jenny was continually confused as to why she had so many blank periods. She would jump from one hour or day to the next without memory of what happened in-between. This was because her alter personalities would take over to protect her from certain situations that caused her stress.
In a talk with that Divine Power about her blank periods, she was told, “Write down your experiences, for some day a book will be written.”
So, she began a journal. As she wrote her alter personalities would take over. They wanted to tell of their abuse to relieve the stress within the body. Writing in her journals became a very healing experience.

It was not until as a seventh grader in 1972 and in answer to more prayer, she was given the reason why she should keep up her journals. A conflicted Jenny was constantly in prayer – where again she was told, “Write down your life experiences, for some day a book will be written to help yourself and others.”
We used those journal writings to write her biography – for seventeen years – the information taken from childhood journals.
We wrote that Jenny graduated 7th in her National Guard’s training platoon. On her 27 th birthday she made the decision to leave the state psychiatric hospital, having made great strides in her treatment for her multiple personalities.
After the biography was first published in 2012 Jenny confessed she had even more personalities come out expressing their tortuous memories. As with most Satanic Ritual Abuse Survivors trying to heal from their abuse, each personality held one or more traumatic experiences, with the worst memories coming out last. The more recent recall was so traumatic that Jenny didn’t want me to write about it in her book.
Other than not hearing about those alters who held even more traumatic memories, I was able to meet most of her alter personalities and have them share their experiences. They awakened and came out if Jenny called them forward. Ergo, with their purposes complete with publication of her biography, for the most part they slept on, content.
Then, two years after her biography was published, 57 year old Jenny unexpectedly passed away of a heart attack on October 17, 2016.
At that time Jenny’s son Robert Steffen wrote, “Our mom, Jenny Hill, was a wonderfully kind person, who loved making people laugh and always made sure you knew you were cared for. She was always quick with a hug, and had an eye for seeing those who were overlooked, and hearing those who usually went unheard.
“For years, she held community Thanksgiving and Christmas celebrations in her home for people in the mentally ill community who had no family to go for a holiday meal. She treated them as her own and organized donations from local businesses and charities to make it happen.
“She had a hard life, but she was always looking to help those who had it harder still. Everyone who came across her knew she was a kind, generous person who would give you her whole heart without wanting anything in return.”