Is this a wood mast?
Forward swept spreaders seems unusual. Typically, masts should have some rake aft and some prebend. A forward raked mast would cause lee helm, which is not desirable as it can lead to unintended jibes. Rake and Prebend are often not well understood and easily confused. Rake is the degree to which the mast leans aft. It is measured by hanging a plumb bob (the main halyard works) from the masthead and measuring the distance from the aft side of the mast at deck level to the plumb bob. Prebend is the amount of curvature in the mast, it is there to prevent the mast from bending forward and to make it easier to bend it back by increasing tension on the back stay. It is measured by taking the main halyard and running to the base of the mast at deck level, it is the distance between the halyard and the mainsail track at the widest point.
Earlier I said, don't assume the prior owner knew what he was doing. I'm beginning to think he really didn't know what he was doing. I'm speculating here, however, the forestay maybe too short and the spreaders are on backwards. This would cause a negative rake, i.e., the mast leaning forward (a bad thing). The PO may have tried to correct this by over tensioning the aft lowers to pull the mast back and straight.
Cap shrouds hold the mast in column and the mast head centered over the boat. The lowers and intermediates (if you have them) keep the middle of the mast straight from side to side. When there are forward and aft lowers, the forwards are there to help hold the prebend in place in addition to keeping the mast straight side to side. The aft lowers counter the diagonal pull of the opposite forward lowers and to keep the mast straight side to side.
The Dedekam book is a good practical hands on guide to mast tuning, the gospel is the late Brion Toss's
The Complete Rigger's Apprentice (Amazon Link). With a wood mast, consulting with a good rigger who knows wooden masts might be worthwhile. Another resource might be a wooden boat forum like
Wooden Boat.
I am working with Mystic Seaport Museum Boatyard to build a couple of wooden masts. Sealing the base is an issue because the original masts rotted out from a poorly designed mast step. The Boatyard suggested setting a tenon in the step and a mortise in the mast base and then filling the mortise with grease. When the mast is stepped, the grease squeezes out across the base of the mast, providing an additional seal and reducing abrasion on the epoxy saturated mast butt. The mortise and tenon may not be an option for your boat, grease and epoxy might help.