Dwayne Johnson, agreeably one of the most "masculine" presenting people in the world, recently revealed that people weren't always so quick to assume he was so. In an interview on "Sunday Today with Willie Geist," that took place earlier this week the American actor and former professional wrestler revealed that when he was a child, people often assumed he was a girl. 

Speaking about his experience with presumed gender identity, The Rock revealed that people often thought he was girl because of his "soft features."

"I would say between the ages of 7 and 11, people thought that I was a little girl because I had really soft features and I had really soft Afro hair," he explained in his interview with Willie Geist.

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The actor even went so far as to share a time in his life as a fifth-grader who was riding on a school bus.

"I sit down next to a kid, and within 60 seconds, he goes, 'Can I ask you something?'" The Rock recalled. "I said, 'Yeah.' He goes, 'Are you a boy or a girl?'"

Drawing on this time in his life, Johnson revealed that likely this also chalks up to his frequent moves as a child.

During his childhood, Johnson's father Rocky Johnson was a professional wrestler who often moved his family around. According to John, he attended thirteen different schools by the time he was in high school.

"I have had a Forrest Gump-ian childhood growing up," Johnson explained in his interview. "Wrestling in the '80s and in the '70s was way different than it is today. A lot of the times, including my father, the wrestlers would live paycheck to paycheck."

The former wrestler reflection on earlier days coincides with the recent premiere of the hit NBC sitcom "Young Rock" a new series based on his life.

Fans of Johnson will be glad to know that he also stars in the series.

He is also portrayed by three different actors Adrian Groulx, Bradley Constant and Uli Latukefu.

"Growing up, and you know we specifically went with these timelines in my life that were very defining times at 10 years old, 15 and 18 … there's a lot of things in between those years that took place ... but it was complicated and the relationship that I had with my dad was incredibly complicated — that was fueled by tough love," he explained during NBC's TCA press tour in an interview about the series.

He went onto share that his father "was kicked out of his house at 13 and he was homeless, so that then shaped the man who then raised me... And in that complication came an extraordinary life that was full of travel. I lived in 13 different states by the time I was 13 years old, also lived in New Zealand."