as someone who's been doing this for a while, that will ebb and flow over time. Additionally, as you become a more experienced artist and more confident in/comfortable with your style of making comics, you'll become better at separating 'art you like' and 'art you can learn from'.
Lots of art styles are simply going to be so disparate from yours that there's really not much point in trying to analyze how a creator did X Y or Z because honestly? You're never going to do it like that, and that's okay.
You have your own way of doing things, and you'll become more comfortable with it and learn which creators are in the same 'school of thought' as you are: ones who think similarly to you and you can glean new techniques from.
With comics, there's multiple categories of this: you may never handle your lineart like artist X, but the way X lays out their panels feels similar to yours. Meanwhile, artist Y draws and inks very similarly to you, but their page design is wildly different, etc.
The more comics you read (now that you are in that 'creator' mindset, it's almost like a soft reset on how much experience you have as a comics reader), the more you'll learn to understand those stylistic differences. You'll also develop the skill of doing both at once: reading a comic and enjoying as 'audience' while simultaneously analyzing it as 'fellow creator' is something that will develop steadily over time. As a new comics creator, you've had a whole new world of how to read comics opened up to you, so it's kind of all-encompassing and overwhelming at the moment.
Becoming more familiar with reading comics that way will help it balance out with the previous mindset of reading and getting lost in the world and story, allowing them to coexist.