Your experience reminds me a little bit of a therapist that I worked with for several years after my initial diagnosis. She made herself extremely available to me when I was in major distress and, consciously or not, allowed me to become extremely dependent on her. Later on in therapy, there was a day when she unloaded on me by yelling at the top of her lungs. I quit soon after and, let me tell you, was it ever hard to break ties with her.
From one side, in what you have written, I see some similar patterns and they concern me. However, from another side, to be blunt, I don't fully trust your reporting of the interpersonal dynamic. Not because I don't trust your intelligence or integrity but because I am responding to my own memory of how very deep old feelings got transferred onto my own therapeutic relationship. It sounds like you've gone through hell during the time you've been working with this guy and, if alcohol is involved, the way you've perceived it may be cloudy. Additionally, I have had a therapist ask me to check in by email once a day and, in that context for me, it didn't hinder my independence.
My own feeling is that people in this thread have jumped a bit quickly to making proclamations and judgments about your therapist based on limited info. Would it work for you to sit down with him and talk solely about your relationship with him and how it is (clearly, I think) triggering old feeling of dependence, trust, abandonment, etc.? I hope that is something that is possible. I suspect it would give you a better read on whether or not he is the right person for you. I strongly suspect that if you were able to say face-to-face: "I am experiencing you as angry at me and as duplicitous in not acknowledging this to me," it would open up a productive conversation.
I guess I think that, given the level of our shared trust issues and hypervigilance to abuse and betrayal, a room full of PTSD sufferers stands to drive a wedge between you and your T. That could either be extremely useful or potentially very damaging to your well-being.
Either way, I am so sorry for the fear you are feeling right now. I read a lot of shame over your behavior in what you've written, and, although you say self-compassion is hard for you, I hope you can find a way to be kind, gentle and forgiving with yourself.
Best of luck