l understand that if you are long an option and it goes up in value because you're +ve delta and vega, with every point underlying goes up the option will go up in value by the delta amount, all else being equal, and if the volatility increases 1% the option will go up in value by it's vega amount x1, all else being equal, so the option will be worth more in those favourable delta and vega movements so when we sell the option, it will be worth more, and we profit. question is if we're already short the option, so -ve delta and -ve vega and underlying goes up, why isn't this beneficial from an option valuation perspective based on the -ve delta and -ve vega, since with every underlying point goes up the option will decrease in value by the delta amount, all else being equal, and if the volatility increases 1 % the option will decrease in value by it's vega amount x1, all else being equal, so the option will be worth less, making a closing trade profitable? am l missing something here?

