I now coin the term HISPANIMATION!
I don't actually know where you're from, other than a spanish speaking country. Wait a minute...
Yeah, I could have just checked your bloody profile and found out you're in mexico. Maybe it should be mexicanimation? Mexicanime? Hispanime? Whatever.
But here's why you need the term, or -a- term, anyway: I keep seeing people call your stuff Anime. True, you have a lot in common with anime: Your art style is iconic, relying on representational depiction of salient features rather than photorealism. Your characters tend to have have large eyes and, less often, small mouths. You do a lot of quirky humor. Your characters role-type themselves, like just about every other indie artist's characters do these days.
But you also have an outstanding ability to characterize... err... -characters- through subtle physical cues and body language, without relying on dialog or heavy-handed takes. Anime relies very heavily on takes. (Takes, for those who don't know, are formulated visible reactions that audiences can easily recognize. A 'spit-take' is when a character spits out what he is drinking in surprise. A 'double-take' is when a character looks at something once, looks away without realizing what it was, and looks back again when he does. A famous Anime take would be the 'giant sweat droplet take' for embarrasment at another's inappropriateness or stupidity.)
Furthermore, in Japanese art styles backgrounds and inanimate are generally resolved with far more photorealism than the actual characters. You don't do that; you keep the same iconic art style in the background as in the foreground.
When I was in highschool spanish they made us watch a series of teaching videos called 'Muzzy', featuring stories about a green sasquatch and an eloping princess. I know that what you draw can't be Anime because, in some subtle way, IT LOOKS EXACTLY LIKE MUZZY, like the way all fish tastes like fish, whether it's halibut or catfish. There is a spanish style of animation. I've seen it. You have it. There is nothing Japanese about it, and it makes me happy to see that other cultures besides America and Japan can still define themselves artistically in this day and age.
Please, please, keep making this great stuff.