Hand 1 - This hand would be fine heads up, but it's a little dicey in a 3 way pot. I probably do the same thing since it's highly unlikely that villain has an 8, let alone an 98. One of the donks probably hit his flush I bet. Tough beat

Hand 2 - This one is interesting. I generally don't like to bloat up a pot with AK because usually when you hit, it's top pair top kicker and I just don't want to go broke with those hands without a good read to get it all-in. However, you bloated it up pre-flop creating a pretty good stack to pot ratio and a favorable situation for yourself if you hit. It feels like you're beat on the turn. If this is a solid, good player, I'd consider this a bad beat if you lost OR a nice win if you somehow survived. On the other hand, I've discovered that against players I am better than, I throw SPR out the window and look to consistently pull out value. I still pay attention to commitment thresholds, but trying to get the perfect SPR will often get bad players to fold worse hands. So, for this hand, I would have tried to keep the pot small and read the situation to get good value when I'm ahead without risking my stack and also minimizing losses when I'm behind without risking my stack. For better or worse, you're playing for stacks with TPTK and this is a volatile style without some solid reads.

Hand 3 - I like a raise on the flop. You're basically giving away a free card to two players on a drawy board by calling a min bet. Then you get it all-in on the turn? Why would you want to play for stacks with over a buy-in? A straight has you beat, sets have you beat, and better two pairs have you beat. Without good reads and stats on villain, these are NOT situations you want to be in.

Hand 4 - The pot before the flop was $2.90. Why would you put in $3.60 on a draw and then the rest of your effective stack which was close to a buy-in on a bricked turn? Also, I'm not crazy about 3 betting AK even @ 6 max unless you know that villain is going to stick around with AQ and AJ type hands.

Hand 5 - Even though you got called, I don't like the flop shove. You're losing a ton of value against most villains and getting called by QT and not boating up the rest of the time.

Hand 6 - I probably check the turn to maximize value against most villains. You're leading in and showing a lot of strength like a guy with trip 10's . Hands you beat probably fold instead of taking a stab and hands that may have you beat re-raise all-in. Maybe you were ahead and maybe you even won, but that river stinks.

Hand 7 - Unless the rules are drastically different @ 6 max, two pair is generally not a hand you want to rush to get it all-in with - especially bottom two pair on a drawy board. Why did you check the flop? Don't give away free cards on coordinated boards. On that board, any turn 3 through Jack except a 5 or 7 makes your hand go down in value.

Hand 8 - Pre-flop: fine. Flop: GOOD! Turn: Good! River: Danger, WIll Robinson, Danger! This is another case where every hand that you have beat folds and every hand that beats you calls. I'd put villain on QJo. Next time, check the river and be glad to get to showdown cheaply if you can.

I don't know if this is normal play or just a select sample or snapshot, but you don't want to be getting it all-in unless you have monster hands or good hands and great reads. When you get it all-in, by and large, you want to have you villain crushed or at least you pushed and now you're flipping. It's hard for me to imagine you're good in most of these situations against most villains long-term no matter what these specific results may be.

Good luck. Hope that helps.