I've enjoyed the other thread that discusses learning that a friend of yours is hung. How about the opposite? Same questions but you learned the friend is small.
"How did you find out? Do you see him any differently to how you saw him before? What if you were the friend in question? Have the relationship dynamics changed?" In addition: Are you well hung? Did he know?
I talked about it in another thread but I have been practicing boxing for a few years now, in a neighborhood club run by an association, where everyone knows each other. Changing rooms are old, showers are completely public. We are far from modern gyms, with dividers.
Thus, members are more comfortable with the idea of undressing in front of others. And among the regulars, I saw almost everyone naked.
I have a friend I've known since high school who goes boxing with me. I saw him naked for the first time last year. He's an extrovert person, straight, in relationship. I didn't expect him to be small. I had no clue, since he wears thick tracksuits.
When I saw him naked, I was quite surprised. His flaccid dick was the size of my thumb, maybe smaller, difficult to tell. He was completely comfortable with it, he was chatting naked with the others in the shower. It doesn't change anything about our friendship, at least for me.
He later saw me naked. At first, he did not say anything. Then on another occasion when we showered together, he asked me 'can I tell you something?'. 'As I see, you're blessed... not like me'. He occasionally jokes about my dick. Somehow it changed the way he sees me, he became very curious, he asked me a lot of questions (if it helped me in my relationships, if it was fully genetic, if jerking-off was better, if I had some 'clothing issues'...). To a lesser extent, I also ask him about his size (if it was a source of complex). I find that seeing us naked has helped break some taboos.
If I were the friend in question, I don't know how I would have reacted. I tell myself that I would have tried to have the same sense of self-mockery as him, but it's easier to say when you don't have a small one.