Woo, wow. Uh, yeah. The ballade is very, very hard ...
Some place this on the same level as Liszt's La Campanella. DO NOT TAKE THIS PIECE LIGHTLY!
That said, I love this piece. I am also working on it.
But if you've only been playing for six months, perhaps you should wait just a little more--I've been playing for about five years, and only now am I beginning to comprehend advanced pieces like the G minor ballade. Many take even longer before they can reach this advanced level.
Look, perhaps wait until you have a through experience with all the other major composers first--try a few Bach inventions, then a prelude and fugue. The Moonlight sonata is good, but try to branch out to other works as well--like the Pathetique sonata. I would also recommend studying Mozart and other Chopin works, such as a valse or nocturne, or both (I've studied two preludes, a mazurka, two nocturnes, and am working on the second movement of the piano concerto in f minor).
The crux of all this is: Don't rush to play the hard stuff. I know, because I tried to learn the third movement of the Moonlight sonata before I was ready, and I screwed up the rhythm big time. If you attempt the big pieces too soon, you'll stunt your growth and technique. This is coming from someone who has learned this the hard way!!!
And lastly, I just love this song so much. It's my favorite piece, alongside Beethoven's Appassionata and Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini. I would hate to see it butchered.
Good luck on your future music studies!