Gomas — Otrova

It sounds like a cursed candy. It sounds like a children’s game from a dystopian cartoon. But in the barrios of South America’s southern cone—and increasingly in the marginalized poblaciones of Chile, Argentina, and Paraguay—it is the name of a smokeable drug that is not quite crack, not quite meth, not quite poison, but somehow all three at once.

It is the drug of the disappeared — not disappeared by dictators, but by a society that has simply stopped looking at the places where people smoke melted rubber in broken lightbulbs. In Greek myth, Sisyphus rolls a boulder up a hill for eternity. In the poblaciones , the user of otrova gomas rolls a boulder made of melted tire and stolen medicine — a sticky, poisonous, unkillable craving — up the hill of another day, another pipe, another hit. otrova gomas

A single “cooked block” costs about $2 USD to produce. It yields 30-40 hits. Each hit sells for the equivalent of $0.10–$0.25 USD. The profit margin is staggering — not in absolute terms, but in survival terms. A dealer working a single street corner can move $15–$20 worth in an afternoon. That’s a week’s wage in the informal economy. It sounds like a cursed candy

I. The Name as a Warning In Spanish, otrova is a phonetic mutation of “otra va” (“another one goes”), or a vulgar derivation of “droga” (drug). Gomas means rubbers—slang for tires, erasers, or, most critically, the elastic, latex-like consistency of a specific synthetic poison. It is the drug of the disappeared —

“Sí. La última. Dos lucas.”

And somewhere, in the cold mathematics of the street, another one goes. If you or someone you know is using inhalants or homemade drugs, contact a local substance abuse hotline. In Chile: FonoDrogas 1412 (anonymous, free). In Argentina: SEDRONAR 0800-222-1184. In the US: SAMHSA helpline 1-800-662-4357.