To those who listened to the recordings and threw up, Thank you for persevering.
@dcstudio - wow, I did not realize that those 3 pieces were common, the fur elise has been engraved to me by my grandfather, it's my most memorable piece. The pathetique and rondo, 2 pieces 1 forcefully learned from the 2nd week of january. Thank you for the evaluation, I'm usually a closet pianist but you've boosted my confidence a little bit.
Yes and I've changed my goal from "succeeding my grandfather" to "I want to play all piece(s) that I listed reasonably well in the future". I think it's a much better goal and succeeding my grandfather will be just a bonus of my hardwork.

@anamnesis - wow there's a book regarding chopin? Now that piqued my interest gotta have both of those books, I'm sure it'll be supplemental as fundamentals of piano practice. And yes about it being good and bad, Well I think, I'm too lazy to read an entire book, I just get essential things that I can profit from.
And about conducting, I can't even identify the time signatures at the start of the piece. I totally suck bigtime. So maybe conducting would be out of the deal.
@brogers - No, I don't think he expects me to know them, after all, he said "review up to what you can reach and I'll choose 5 etudes from that". But he did say review 10-45.
I'm still thinking about what he meant by review, sight read and play each etude fluently? Or sight read and expect to have mistakes? Or memorize the whole 35 etudes? Damn. If that's the case, I'm wasting my time sight reading the book!
About your teacher, he made you do all of that? What happened to your previously learned advanced pieces? Did you forget them and relearn them with the help of your teacher? How are they now? I envy you for having such a great teacher. Don't you hit speed walls(I assume not, because you have a great teacher).
Thank you for the evaluation, about pathetique, I really don't know how to voice out the cantabile effect. So I wish i played it at a constant piano or pianissimo. Though my dynamics and rhythm really jumbles up most of the time.
@keypeg - yes, I am curious on what bernhard's students sounds like, I believe his teachings are as effective as any good teacher, though It's hard to really grasp the concept of his teachings through paragraphs posted in this forum. And what's worse, he's been inactive for a long, long time.
Yes, I'm aware of the methods he discussed with me, though I have been using hanon for an hour(with 5 min breaks) using his fingers lifted high method for 3 days, so far, nothing hurts. My wrists and forearm just tenses up after a prolonged time of playing and then bam! wrong notes.!
Very invaluable insight on teachers keypeg, I'll see what my teacher is like on the 2nd session. I wish he's the good type but by the looks of his expression, It feels like he's really looking forward to working with me to achieve my goals.
@quantum - Yes, your advice was noted, thank you. Yes at first I was a bit shocked that he suggested me hanon(since I was the anti hanon type at the time), though I have been using it for a few days and noticed slight improvement in my technique, still it's something to look forward to in the future. I'll just take whatever my teacher throws at me, As long as it helps me improve and get rid of my bad habit(stuttering). If something weird comes up, I'll always have the members of this forum to help me.
This is a late reply, typing in a phone sucks. And I'm sorry if my responses are too shallow, I have yet to explore what you guys experienced throughout your journeys with the piano.