In addition to couple other specific notes I see in the thread: your タ has a really big gap that makes it look very similar to your ヌ, and your の isn’t grounded which makes it look like a 9. The wholesome point above about personality in handwriting is valid, but legibility is still paramount - after all, language exists to communicate to others.
I found these great “how to write [hiragana/katakana]” books on Amazon that I personally used to feel like I really knew kana: they include stroke order, example kana in various fonts so you can get a feel for what’s “right” vs what’s just font differences, shadow tracings, squared lines to help with overall spacing, and loooots of writing practice using actual Japanese vocabulary. I think the vocab-driven practice in particular really made a difference for me vs kana charts in a vacuum, since it contextualizes the characters into words without you needing to already know anything about Japanese (think of like English learners’ books, “A is for Apple” kind of associations can be really helpful, not that this book is THAT simplistic).
https://www.amazon.com/Writing-Japanese-Hiragana-Introductory-Language/dp/4805313498