Many parents feel entitled to being honored. This is a common attitude amongst American parents. Most American parents think that they deserve blind obedience in children. However, these parents need an attitude adjustment. No entity is deserving of blind obedience except God Himself. Honoring parents simply means taking care of parents as they age.
The Fifth Commandment is stated in Exodus 20:12 KJV:
Honour thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee,
The Hebrew word translated "honour" is kabad and refers to being a caregiver to another person, in this case an aging parent. The idea is to give parents the same loving care that you received as children. However, this only works if parents took care of you as a child. If your parents were abusive to you, you have the right to shun them, and only forgive them once they give a meaningful apology. If your parents were abusive to you, all you have to do is find a nursing home for them. This commandment seems commonsense, but there was an epidemic of elder abuse and neglect in the Old Testament.
A common motive for punitive measures in parenting is when parents feel "dishonored" and "disrespected". Most American parents punish their children for "disrespect". Some parents only punish their children for "disrespect". However, all punitive parenting is prohibited in the Bible, including in the case that children are "disrespectful" as seen by parents. See Colossians 3:21 KJV:
Fathers, provoke not your children to anger, lest they be discouraged.
The Greek root word translated "provoke...to anger" is ερεθιζο (Latin: erethizo) and refers here to offenses or damages, namely the slightest of personal offense perceived by a child, stemming from entitlement. It is one thing to stop spanking children. However, it is not enough to stop spanking your children, or even stop punishing your child altogether for that matter. You need to avoid offense in children. Avoiding offense in children is the same as avoiding offense in other adults. Just as hurt feelings are inevitable in relations between adults, hurt feelings are also inevitable in children when dealing with them. Thus, in order to avoid offense in children, you should be willing to give a meaningful apology whenever you hurt your child's feelings. Usually, all that is necessary is a reassurance of good intent coming from parents, in the form of an informal apology, whenever you hurt your children's feelings with a limit not set out of anger, such as "I'm sorry, but I had to set X limit for Y reasons". However, if you ever lose your cool as a child as a parent, including while setting limits, you definitely need to give a formal apology to your child for hurting their feelings with your anger, such as "I apologize for losing my temper with you", and then commit never to losing your cool with your child ever again, as losing your cool with your child alone is entitlement, and was seen as entitlement in the Early Church, This commandment cross-references the Eighth and the Tenth Commandments, with the Apostle Paul here convicting a group of Greek Christian parents who brought into the church their pagan custom of patrias potestas, which is a Latin phrase roughly translating to "power to the parent", namely the power to impose punitive sanctions on children, such as spanking or other forms of punishment of children. However, this commandment ultimately was received as prohibiting all offense as perceived by a child. Paul, contrary to popular legend, was anti-spanking, and opposed any and all punitive parenting in his secular writings. Attachment parenting was banned under Roman law, but the Early Christians did it anyway, obeying God over men.
The Fifth Commandment does not prohibit speaking against parents. This commandment instead commands that children care for their aging parents. However, parents are obligated to treat their children with respect, and not punish them for anything. If they do not treat their children with respect, they can be shunned by an abused child of theirs.
I myself forgive my parents for abusing me. However, though I forgive, I don't forget. I only forgive them at all because they apologized. If your parents don't apologize to you genuinely, you do not have to forgiven them for abusing you.
The depraved and entitled parents who provoke their children to anger through punitive parenting will not inherit the Kingdom of God! Let them be cast forever into the lake of fire and burning sulfur, which is the second death prepared for Satan and his accomplices! Let them descend into the abyss which is the ever-burning Hell of fire and torment, suffering God's Wrath day and night forever and ever! Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand!