By Abdul Masih –
Starting with crystals, she got into Buddhism, then spiritual healing, dowsing rods, female rituals, Native American spirituality, wiccan and finally white witchcraft. Jeany Carroll tried exorcising homeless people, but at night those same demons attacked her and wouldn’t let her sleep.
“I was demonically oppressed. I was seeing demons. I was getting attacked by demons. I couldn’t sleep because I was too afraid to go to sleep. They were shadowy figures,” Jeany says. “Because of sleep deprivation, I figured I would wind up in a mental hospital. Or I could go to church.”
Jeany – who was living in Kailua, Hawaii, at the time – accepted Jesus and embarked on an ambitious plan of reading the Bible, starting with Genesis. When she got to Job 1 and 2, she understood that demons are subject to the power and authority of Almighty God. The fear left her, and she could sleep.

Today, Jeany lives in Las Vegas, NV, and is outreaching City of Darkness by handing out Jesus films zip code by zip code with Saturate USA.
Her father met, married and imported her mother from South Korea. Jeany grew up the only Asian in Wickliffe, OH. She was obsessed with the rock star Prince because of “Purple Rain“ and ran away to Los Angeles at age 17 in search of stardom.
She also dabbled in Buddhism. “You know how marijuana is a gateway drug?” she says. “Buddhism is a gateway false religion to all the other false religions. Once you start off with any false religions, it’s the opening of the gateway to the demonic.”
She met and married a Prince Wannabe, who performed similar style music. She had two children with him. But when he cheated on her after eight years of marriage, she called it quits and moved to Hawaii.
Because her son had autism, she sought speech therapy at a place called Brain Gym. The therapist also practiced spiritual healing, and Jeany’s curiosity got piqued. The lady used dowsing rods to answer questions. Jeany, she said, was being punished in this life for being a bad person in a previous life.
She met people who introduced her to “goddess” mysticism. These ladies practice rituals that are supposed to be empowering. One of them was to eat the fruit of Eve and turn the curse into a blessing. They actually ate fruit.


.It was fascinating and the evident supernatural power made her want more. She progressed through different branches of New Age occultic practices and finally came to white witchcraft. Because white witches try to help and don’t curse people like black witches, she thought it was good.
What she saw and heard and learned, she tried to put into practice. She tried to help the homeless by exorcising demons. Those same demons attacked her at home at night in bed. She was terrified and couldn’t sleep.
The sleep deprivation, she realized, would lead her to a mental breakdown and probably a mental institution. So she remembered back to the yellow bus that drove around her neighborhood picking up kids to take to church. She hadn’t understood the Gospel but remembered it.
In 1997, she went to church in Hawaii, where she accepted Christ and began learning the Bible. Deliverance was not instantaneous. She had to pray and renounce the “25 religions” she had dabbled with. “In New Age, you become an everythingist,” she says.
In her Bible reading, she made it to the Book of Job, where the scripture teaches clearly that God is more powerful than Satan, and Satan needs to ask God permission to attack a person.

That did it. She was able to sleep.
In 2000, she thought to move closer to be with her family in Las Vegas. She lives there today. Her daughter is married with children. Her son wants to get married.
Jeany passes out Jesus films in neighborhoods, a project sponsored by SaturateUSA. She is convincing local churches to join; you adopt a zip code and pass out Jesus films provided to you free of charge by SaturateUSA.
“This is what our city needs,” she says. “I need to do this. This is amazing.”
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