Yes, It looked to me like you had either the rudder or elevator reversed, or both, or you just pulled the stick in completely the wrong direction.
Don't lose hope. I lost two planes completely before I ever go my first flight. My first was a glider, which I handed over to an experienced pilot to trim out. He insisted on using his own transmitter, but, of course, he didn't check servo directions, which we didn't find out until the glider was released from the bungee at about 100ft. What was most annoying was that it flew beautifully when he let go of the sticks, but he insisted on diving it into the ground at an enormous speed. The second was a Mini Super with an OS15 glow engine. There were no simulators in those days and I didn't trust anybody else to fly it after the previous incident. At full throttle, it was rather lively, and I was panicking so much that I forgot to reduce the throttle, so that one ended up as matchwood too. Moral of the story, don't forget to throttle back to something like half-way as soon as you have control of the plane after launch. It'll make it much more docile and easy to control.