This will be a good record of your starting point with this piece. First 2-4 measures sound pretty good.
Here are a few thoughts that come to my mind. You probably already know the ideas in these 3 items, but I mention them anyway. If your goal is to play only for fun and not earn your living as a pianist - only risk of injury in item number 3 applies.
1) Yadeehoo “wormhole” theory: Yadeehoo was a talented Pianostreet member that posted several years ago. If I recall correctly - He was maybe 20 years old and had only been playing piano for about 6 months when he started learning this Chopin Op 10 No 1 etude. The first maybe 10 measures sounded pretty good for such a beginner from what I recall when he posted on Pianstreet. Yadeehoo was convinced that in another year he would be able to play this piece nearly as good as the pros. This was based on his very quick development of this piece that he already achieved and his mental projections of what another year of practice would do. He was convinced that he could skip learning easy pieces and go straight to this difficult piece. Sort of like finding that magic “wormhole” that every other pianist had missed. I don’t think he ever posted a second attempt at this piece. I strongly suspect that things fell apart for him – at least in regard to this piece. MAIN POINT: You will need to be able to perform level 5-6 and much higher Czerny (and others) well and play even sounding scales and arpeggios (among many other things) before being able to competently play this piece with reliability. There is no wormhole that allows you to bypass this.
2) Shot put: Playing this piece is NOT like throwing a shot put in competition where you psych yourself up and visualize in your mind the throw before each throw. In your case – before playing the first 2-4 measures of this piece. Playing this piece should feel easy and natural. Also, unlike shot put, you don't take the best of several attempts when performing piano live.
3) Risks: Playing pieces that are too difficult has risks associated with it - risk of developing poor technique and practice habits. Also, injury is another risk to consider.
Having said this, the first 4 measures sound quite impressive for the amount of time you have been playing piano.