Hi, I'm Aneisha I'm a pattern detector and clarity creator.

Aneisha with a Yellow Background

I reveal overlooked connections between today's problems and tomorrow's solutions.

My goal is to help you turn confusion into clear action with systems and practical insights.

I see connections that others miss, and I translate those insights into practical steps you can actually use.

Whether I'm organizing financial data through bookkeeping, writing about complex systems, or speaking, my goal is always the same: to help you move from "this is overwhelming" to "now I know what to do next."

How I Can Help You

I bring my pattern-recognition skills to these three areas.

Fractional Bookkeeping

Through Yellow Sky, I help business numbers make sense to neurodivergent entrepreneurs

  • Bookkeeping strategy sessions

  • Bookkeeping systems setup

  • Monthly done-for-you bookkeeping

Learn more

Writing & Content

I translate complex concepts into accessible insights through my blog and other writing, focusing on systems, neurodiversity, and practical learning.

  • Systems thinking

  • Neurodiversity insights

  • Financial literacy

Read my articles

Speaking

I appear on podcasts, panels, and workshops to discuss neurodiversity, finances, and entrepreneurship

  • Podcast interviews

  • Interactive workshops

  • Panels

See my appearances

How I Think About Problems

1

See Patterns

I help clients see the underlying patterns that make their systems work (or not work).

2

Create Systems

I help you create systems that flex with your needs rather than rigid structures that break under pressure or get abandoned entirely.

3

Reveal Clarity

By revealing these hidden patterns and connections, I can help you move from overwhelm to clear, actionable steps.

Featured Writing

What I Explored in a Month

Once a month, I share my future works in progress by sharing what I’m learning, exploring, and currently curious about.

Read here

What’s so familiar about the phrase “You don’t look autistic”

And why it doesn’t bother me (much)

Thoughts from a Late-Diagnosed Autistic Woman

My thoughts and experiences after discovering I'm autistic.

Read here