When a patient enters hospice care, the people around her look for ways to make the time meaningful. For the staff at a Wilmington, North Carolina facility caring for a woman known affectionately as Ms. Etta, that meant trying to do something that sounded almost impossible. She wanted to reconnect with her most famous former student. She wanted, in her own words, to hug his neck one more time.
Michael Jordan was not exactly easy to reach.
Ms. Etta had spent more than four decades teaching at Laney High School in Wilmington, the same school where Jordan attended before graduating in 1981. She had spoken about him often over the years, returning to memories of that time whenever she reflected on her long teaching career. When hospice staff learned how much a reconnection would mean to her, they began trying to make it happen. The attempts failed. Numbers went unanswered. Messages disappeared into the vast apparatus that surrounds a figure of Jordan’s profile.
Then an unknown number called back.
The call nobody expected
A social worker named Wendy picked up the phone and heard a voice ask immediately whether she was speaking with Ms. Etta. It was Jordan. He had found the number, returned the call and led with exactly the right question. Wendy did not waste a moment. She drove directly to Ms. Etta’s residence and set up a FaceTime session between the two.
What followed was not a formal or ceremonial exchange. It was a conversation between two people who had known each other a long time and had things to say. They laughed. They reminisced. They teased each other with the easy familiarity of people who share real history. Staff present in the room described the moment as one that brought tears to everyone watching, not from sadness but from the particular emotion that arises when something genuinely good happens in a place where good things can feel scarce.
Footage from the call captured Ms. Etta on her couch, smiling, visibly at ease, talking with a relaxed Jordan as though no particular amount of time had passed between them. The image traveled quickly and widely, and for good reason.
A connection rooted in Wilmington
Jordan’s relationship with Wilmington has never been purely symbolic. He has returned to the city at meaningful moments over the years, showing up not as a celebrity making an appearance but as someone with a genuine stake in the place that shaped him.
In 2018, following the devastation caused by Hurricane Florence, he came back to help distribute Thanksgiving meals to families still recovering from the storm. He also donated fifty pairs of sneakers to children at a local Boys and Girls Club, an act that received far less attention than it deserved given its simplicity and directness. The following year he gave more than a million dollars to Laney High School, dividing the contribution evenly between athletic programs and academic ones, investing in both the institution and the students it serves.
These are not the actions of someone performing generosity for an audience. They are the actions of someone who remembers where he came from and considers that memory an obligation.
What Ms. Etta gave him
Teachers rarely know the full weight of what they leave behind. They work in the daily and the ordinary, in the patience required to show up year after year for students who may not recognize what they are receiving until long after they have left the classroom. Ms. Etta spent more than forty years doing exactly that at Laney High School, and one of the students who passed through her care went on to become the most celebrated basketball player the sport has ever produced.
That Jordan thought to call back, that he led with her name, that he sat with her and laughed and let the conversation be what it needed to be, says something about what those years of teaching actually produce. Not just skill or discipline or the habits of mind that lead to success, but the kind of connection that survives distance and time and the enormous asymmetry of what two lives eventually become.
The moment that mattered most
There are many ways to measure what Michael Jordan has meant to the world. The championships. The records. The cultural imprint that extended far beyond basketball into something closer to mythology. All of it is real and none of it explains the FaceTime call to a hospice in Wilmington.
That call was something simpler and more lasting. It was a man making sure that the woman who once helped shape him knew, before the time ran out, that she had not been forgotten.
Ms. Etta got her wish. Not the hug she asked for, but something close enough to matter. A face on a screen, a familiar voice, a laugh shared between two people who knew each other when everything was still ahead of them.

