Just be up front with your anesthesiologist and your surgeon tomorrow morning and let them make the call. Seriously. Tell them how much you've smoked--and that it's been both weed and tobacco. They need to be able to make a fully educated decision about what's going to be the best for the procedure and your health.

If they do reschedule you, then you'll know that was for the best. If it's a relatively minor procedure with only sedation anesthesia and, knowing what you've told them, they elect to move forward, then you can feel very certain that they don't think it's risky enough to reschedule you. But if they do choose to schedule you for another day, you need to plan to follow the no-smoking directions for next time. Smoking not only complicates your pulmonary health, both during and after surgery, it also prevents your capillaries, the smallest blood vessels you have and the ones that need to knit themselves back together so you can heal from an incision, from mending like they should. Surgical patients who smoke have wounds that don't heal as well. That's why everyone who smokes cigarettes needs to quit. Because the truth is if you're out in the world and, say, your appendix ruptures or you're in a car wreck, you might need emergency surgery. Happens to folks every single day of the year.