Ford, Lewis S and Suchocki, Marjorie.  “A Whiteheadian Reflection on Subjective Immortality.”  Process Studies 7, no. 1 (Spring 1977): 1-13.

Abstract

The subjective experience of any one finite actuality perishes, but possibly it can be re-enacted in God's experience.  In every experience there is something experienced (the datum), and this is experienced in some manner (the subjective form).  Each subjective form is the very personal way in which that subject experiences its world.  Among finite actualities such conformation is both imperfect and partial, but in God there is full conformation.  This means that God experiences each situation I confront in exactly the same way I felt it.  Subjective immediacy is compounded of two factors, the inner creative activity of the momentary occasion, and the subjective form this has.  This inner creative activity is momentary, and does not survive; God's creative activity is distinct from it.  Yet the same subjective form is re-enacted in God, so that experience is mine formally.  The experience is mine, reborn in God.  God experiencing through me is the same as my experiencing in God.  This claim is defended against immediate objections, and some of its implications are explored. [Abstract from The Philosopher’s Index]