"Nothing you do for children is ever wasted. They seem not to notice us, hovering, averting our eyes, and they seldom offer thanks, but what we do for them is never wasted"
About this Quote
The sentence also performs a quiet bait-and-switch. It begins as reassurance (“Nothing…is ever wasted”), then immediately supplies the evidence that would normally disprove it: they don’t notice, they don’t thank you. Keillor anticipates the reader’s grievance and folds it into the comfort. The point isn’t that children are ungrateful; it’s that gratitude is the wrong metric. Parenting is an investment with no quarterly report.
Context matters: Keillor’s Midwestern, humane sensibility often elevates ordinary decency over grand gestures. Here he’s arguing for an ethic of uncredited labor. The subtext is cultural, too: in an era obsessed with outcomes and recognition, he sanctifies the invisible work - lunches packed, rides given, limits enforced - by insisting its payoff is delayed, indirect, and still real. The comfort is earned because it doesn’t pretend the work feels good; it insists it matters anyway.
Quote Details
| Topic | Parenting |
|---|---|
| Source | Evidence: Nothing you do for children is ever wasted. They seem not to notice us, hovering, averting our eyes, and they seldom offer thanks, but what we do for them is never wasted. (Story/Chapter: "Easter" (page number varies by edition; commonly cited as p. 20 or p. 23)). Primary-source attribution points to Garrison Keillor’s own book Leaving Home: A Collection of Lake Wobegon Stories (New York: Viking, 1987). Multiple secondary references (e.g., Drake University Newsroom, WIST, Wikiquote) specifically locate the line in the story/monologue titled "Easter" within Leaving Home and quote the same wording. However, I could not access a scanned/previewed page image of the 1987 first edition in this search session to confirm the exact page number in the original printing; different sites cite different pages (e.g., p. 20 vs p. 23), and at least one citation appears to refer to a later Penguin edition/date. The library catalog record cited above provides authoritative bibliographic details (publisher/year/ISBN) confirming the 1987 Viking edition and that "Easter" is a section in the book. Other candidates (1) The Complete Idiot's Guide to Great Quotes for All Occasions (Elaine Bernstein Partnow, 2008) compilation98.9% ... Nothing you do for children is ever wasted . They seem not to notice us , hovering , averting our eyes , and they... |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Keillor, Garrison. (2026, February 9). Nothing you do for children is ever wasted. They seem not to notice us, hovering, averting our eyes, and they seldom offer thanks, but what we do for them is never wasted. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nothing-you-do-for-children-is-ever-wasted-they-31302/
Chicago Style
Keillor, Garrison. "Nothing you do for children is ever wasted. They seem not to notice us, hovering, averting our eyes, and they seldom offer thanks, but what we do for them is never wasted." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nothing-you-do-for-children-is-ever-wasted-they-31302/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Nothing you do for children is ever wasted. They seem not to notice us, hovering, averting our eyes, and they seldom offer thanks, but what we do for them is never wasted." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nothing-you-do-for-children-is-ever-wasted-they-31302/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.








