@Fadeaway : Here's my story (one I repeated ad nauseam when I first joined the forum two years ago)
I was diagnosed with PTSD in 1998. At the time the diagnosis meant nothing to me as I had no knowledge of the disorder. My response was 'Yeah, yeah, shit happens and then you get over it', as I confused PTSD with post-traumatic stress.
Then, October 2012 onwards I had a major PTSD meltdown and had every symptom in the book. At first I had no idea what was happening. I started seeing a trauma counselor, mainly because the sessions (8) were free and she was based conveniently close by. Don't be fooled by 'trauma' counselor, the woman was completely clueless. (In her defense: she is only trained to debrief people after a trauma.) When my attachment issues reared its ugly head, she thought I was in love with her. When I had a full blown panic attack in her presence, she reassured me feeling as though one was going crazy was perfectly normal when one is in love!! And the more I protested the more she looked really sad for me. And, at the end of the 8 sessions, she wished me well and was visibly relieved to be rid of me. PTSD never crossed her mind. But I remembered the previous diagnosis and started reading.
I found a psychologist. By that time I was a mess. We had one very long session, at the end of which she said she'd think about whether she could work with me, and let me know in the second session the next week. During the week I emailed her and cancelled. I started looking for another. (She never mentioned PTSD either.)
The next one was even worse. At the end of the very long session, I asked 'Now what?' She said, impatiently 'See you next week.' I went, 'Oh, same time? She said, 'Obviously'. But the day before our next session she phoned to cancel the next day's session, and said she had thought about it, and felt I needed to be hospitalized, and would give me a referral to an inpatient program. I explained that with the logistics of my life, it was completely out of the question. She ended the call, saying it was my choice. (She never mentioned PTSD either.)
By that time I was an even bigger mess. I found the fourth one. She was really, really wonderful. Although she wouldn't go anywhere near a diagnosis, she at least referred to me as a 'trauma survivor'. She reassured me that being 'passed on' by a therapist was 'deeply rejecting'. I started seeing her twice a week. My attachment issues ran riot, but the panic attacks stopped. But, due to the mess I was, my income plummeted, and she dumped me unceremoniously after 10 sessions when yet another fed up client fired me. That was the end of therapy for me. She stayed in email contact for the next two years, but the email exchanges frustrated me as each one said 'I don't have the time now to fully address ...', or, 'the issue can't be properly addressed in an email' or ..... I was still insanely and idiotically attached to her, and I had an enormous internal struggle of wanting to end the attachment and being thrown into a state of panic by the need to do so. I thought she did care - as indicated by the email contact, and her continuing references to 'when you return to therapy' (when I could afford her). This kept the attachment alive. And on and on we went - for two years, during which I simply limped along - and stayed sane ONLY due to this forum.
It was only when I read the code of conduct for mental health care professionals, and realized that she was under legal obligation to 'provide emergency services' even when the client could not afford to pay, that I realized she was simply covering her own ass.
The point I'm trying to make is that, in my experience, there are total idiots, malicious jerks, monumental assholes in the mental health care system as much as there are in the general population. Their training does not make them more human or more intelligent or more anything. So, your therapist screwed up BIG TIME, and your feelings are totally valid. And she may know that her behaviour is unacceptable or she may not. And if she refers you to someone else it may be the right therapist for you, selected with care, or it may be the first she found in the directory, and totally NOT suitable.
My advice is: Yes, what she did, especially if you have attachment issues, borders on the bloody criminal. Yes, she should know that it is experienced as 'deeply rejecting' by a client with a trauma background. Yes, she should have put effort into getting you safely in the care of another therapist. But she didn't, she isn't, she won't, she can't, she...'.
The sooner you get a decent therapist the better. You'll have to process what happened with this inadequate one. In the mean time, this forum will keep you sane as it did me.