You got the geezer bit right.
I hate to break it to you, but the time axis on the PM display extends for 1.2 seconds. Here's your stroke:
1) Within the limits of monitor resolution, you're still not up to the top of the display. You're one pixel block shy. I make that ~130 kgs handle force, not 135.
2) You've "achieved" this "miracle" of force production mainly by contracting your drive duration. Within the limits of monitor resolution, it looks as though you're at 0.55 seconds in this screenshot. The stroke cycle r23 takes 2.6 seconds. Thus your drive:recovery ratio is 0.55:2.05 or 1:3.72. Neither drive duration nor ratio are anywhere near what you've been touting them to be.
As I've been telling you for years now, you can't have it both ways on a drive. You can't simultaneously achieve maximum force and maximum duration. If you emphasize one it
must come at the expense of the other. In a boat there's something to be said for early peak force -- but only if you can achieve it without doing counterproductive things like driving the boat down with excessive up/down swing of the head and trunk. And if you bash out the catches you'd better be sure your blade is in the water where it should be, or you're wasting effort.
Moreover, the dip and break in the force curve halfway down the tail are signs of a wobbly connection (could be hand height, change in trunk speed vis-a-vis handle, arm break....); the sharp downward turn at the end of the tail is the "contribution" of your extreme layback at the finish, which adds next to nothing positive and makes it difficult for you to get out of the bow.