You seem to be having trouble understanding flow rate. Flow rate is the speed of air being inhaled or exhaled. Take a normal breath in, lets say that the flow rate was + 15. Now take a hard fast breath in like you are trying to catch your breath, that is probably something like + 30. Take a normal breath out, that is probably around -15. Take a hard breath out (like trying to blow out a candle) and it is probably -30. Hold your breath and flow rate is 0. The flow rate changes from positive (inhale) to negative (exhale) on every breath. Normal breathing has a gradual transition from exhale to inhale, a rounded peak inhalation, a faster transition to max exhale and then slowly starts changing back to another inhalation.
Flow limitation is an index from 0 to 1. The higher the value the more restricted your inhalation was. A normal breath has no flow limitation. A flow limited breath has a lower flow rate (because it is restricted) and a flatter top (sometimes even convex appearance). In order to breath in the same amount of air you have to take a longer breath. Find a straw and breath in normally and then try breathing in through the straw. Breathing through a straw creates flow limitation and makes it harder to breath in.
The instances you circled are 0 flow rate and more than 10 seconds which means they are apnea. They are followed by CA flags indicating they are central apnea (machine has a way to differentiate central vs obstructive apnea). There is almost no normal breathing in that example but the closest is after 01:01:30 when your breathing starts to stabilize. The breathing where green line is paused breathing (looks similar to an apnea but shorter length and because it is under 10 seconds is not an apnea).
I modified this image to give an idea of what normal breathing looks like, flow limited breathing and then an apnea. You should be able to see how the breath size declines as flow limitation increases and how if flow rate stops it can be an apnea.
If you are having trouble understanding this still maybe try wearing CPAP and taking some normal breaths, holding breath, taking shallow breaths, taking deep breaths etc in a way you can remember and then look at your CPAP data to see how it compares to how you were breathing.