Your code is pretty close to what you want. You just have to switch from the immediate child selector to the general one.
Example Markup:
<div id="myDiv">
<div class="enabled"></div>
<div class="enabled"></div>
<div class="disabled"></div>
<div>
<div class="disabled"></div>
</div>
</div>
$("#myDiv > :not(.disabled)")
Will ignore the first disabled class but not affect any nested elements because ">" only selects children on the next level down.
$("#myDiv :not(.disabled)")
Will select all children of #myDiv excluding .disabled anywhere in the hierarchy.
As @Robo Robok points out, its unclear whether you want the selector on #myDiv or on its child elements. In this example, clicking within #myDiv not on a disabled area will produce the desired effect. However, if there is space inside your div like padding or space between children, clicking there will have no effect.
What I think you want to do is put the selector on the div and then prevent bubbling from the disabled areas.
$("#myDiv").on("click", function(e) {
if ($(e.target).is(".disabled")) {
return;
}
//your code
});