<p>Does this mean I can’t go to other CSU too? What are the worst consequences?</p>
<p>The worst consequences is just that you gambled the time and money and effort you spent on grad school, and you lost. That time and money and effort is gone. But that is really the only consequence. You still have your undergraduate degree and can still go out and get a job (the logical next step!), and more people leave grad school than you might ordinarily think.</p>
<p>As to other schools… well, that gets tricky. There is nothing saying that you cannot go back to grad school, perhaps even the one you are leaving. But it will be much, much harder from here. Any school is going to consider this during the application process, and they are going to think about this specific pair of questions: why did this person leave their previous program, and is that still a concern?</p>
<p>Realistically, those doubts will substantially devalue your application. If you apply somewhere with lower standards, they might decide to roll the dice and give you another shot. If you take a few years and do something to improve your application and assuage doubts, you might get into another CSU or even the one you are currently attending. But that will be difficult unless you can identify what went wrong and then fix it.</p>