Tuomo, I may be able to help answer. A different context might make the concept more intuitive.
The leaning tower of Pisa is finally falling over. You see it start to slowly lean more and more. Thinking quickly, you get out your rope and manage to lasso the top. You're going to try to stop its fall. Maybe you just barely caught it before the point of no return.
Now would you choose to stand next to it and pull down on the rope to try to stop it?
Or would you choose to stand away from it.
One of these gives you more leverage.
All bow limbs have forward momentum throughout the power stroke. Ideally that momentum is stopped instantly at the end of the power stroke, when the bow hits brace. Any movement in the bow limbs after the arrow has left the string is indicative of energy that could have gone in to the arrow, but didn't. So you really want those limbs to stop. The string is the only thing there to stop them.
But some string angles offer better leverage to stop them. If the string has poor leverage, it will get stretched out as the limbs keep moving forward despite it. In the first pic, imagine the tower falling, lifting the guy off the ground, his weight barely making a difference. The force that would lift him is the same force that would stretch a bow string.
The now longer string means the limbs can travel past the intended brace position (related to: longer string means lower brace). Eventually, assuming the string doesn't break, it will stop stretching, the limbs' forward momentum will finally die, the string will elastically rebound, and the limbs will go back, oscillating back and forth for a bit around the intended brace position, flapping.