I used to hate it quite a bit, but a few things changed.
First, like a lot of people here said, I went and looked at what I liked in other people's art and tried to incorporate it into mine. It took a few years because I had to untrain a lot of things that were ingrained into my artistic eye (I was VERY religious about joints and proportions the kind of style I liked played very fast and loose with both of those things) but I got there eventually.
The other bit of advice is to figure out what your strengths are and lean heavier into them. Like, some things just don't come naturally to you (for example, for me it's rendering. I always over-render and it takes forever for a mediocre result). So unless it's something you WANT to get better at, just draw your style away from the thing you don't like/don't get and towards something you're stronger at. For me it was movement, so that's the direction I went into. Simpler shading (I literally use two brushes to draw digitally, and traditionally if I use color, I just do rough watercolors), but a more dynamic style. It's a work in progress but it's made me much happier to draw and much happier with the results.